Physico-theology: Or, A Demonstration of the Being and Attributes of God, from His Works of Creation. Being the Substance of Sixteen Sermons Preached in St. Mary-le-Bow-church, London; at the Honourable Mr. Boyle's Lectures, in the Years 1711, and 1712. With Large Notes, and Many Curious Observations |
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Results 1-5 of 14
Page 1
... Respiration and Animal Life 5 . Vegetation of Plants 9 . Conveyance of SThe winged Tribes . Sound II . The Functions of Nature . Reflecting and Refracting Light 12 . Containing the Winds , which are of great Ufe and Neceffity To the ...
... Respiration and Animal Life 5 . Vegetation of Plants 9 . Conveyance of SThe winged Tribes . Sound II . The Functions of Nature . Reflecting and Refracting Light 12 . Containing the Winds , which are of great Ufe and Neceffity To the ...
Page 16
... Respiration : But the Caufe is not the Subtilty or too great Delicacy , as Mr. Boyl thinks , but the too great Lightness thereof , which renders it unable to be a Counterbalance , or an Antagonist to the Heart , and all the Muscles ...
... Respiration : But the Caufe is not the Subtilty or too great Delicacy , as Mr. Boyl thinks , but the too great Lightness thereof , which renders it unable to be a Counterbalance , or an Antagonist to the Heart , and all the Muscles ...
Page 16
... Respiration of Fishes very fingular , and fomewhat out of the way , I have for the Reader's Diverfion taken notice of it . ( f ) By Experiments I made my felf in the Air Pump , in September and October , 1704 ; I obferved that Animals ...
... Respiration of Fishes very fingular , and fomewhat out of the way , I have for the Reader's Diverfion taken notice of it . ( f ) By Experiments I made my felf in the Air Pump , in September and October , 1704 ; I obferved that Animals ...
Page 16
... Respiration , ( a ) Ventus eft aer fluens , is Seneca's Definition , Na . Qu . 1. 5 . And as Wind is a Current of the Air , fo that which excites or al- ters its Currents may be justly faid to be the Caufe of the Winds . An Equipoife of ...
... Respiration , ( a ) Ventus eft aer fluens , is Seneca's Definition , Na . Qu . 1. 5 . And as Wind is a Current of the Air , fo that which excites or al- ters its Currents may be justly faid to be the Caufe of the Winds . An Equipoife of ...
Page 145
... Respiration by all the Anatomifts before Malpighi's Difcoveries of the Structure of the Lungs , are fo various , and many of them fo improbable , that it would be frivolous to recount them . But the more eminent modern Anatomifts affign ...
... Respiration by all the Anatomifts before Malpighi's Difcoveries of the Structure of the Lungs , are fo various , and many of them fo improbable , that it would be frivolous to recount them . But the more eminent modern Anatomifts affign ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable againſt alfo alſo Anat Animalcules animalia Animals autem Beafts becauſe befides Birds Body Bones Book Cafe Caufe Chap Cloathing commodious confiderable Contrivance Cornea Creatures cùm curious deferve Defign Deor divers doth Earth effe efpecially Eggs enim etiam faid faith fame feem feen felf ferve feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft fmall fome fomewhat Food foon ftrong fuch fufficient funt Galen Hift himſelf Infects infinite Inftance ingenious laft leaft lefs manifeft Meaſure moft moſt Motion Mufcles Muſcles Nature neceffary Nerves Note Number Obfervations Occafions Optick Paffage paffing particular Perfons Place Pleaſure Plin Pofture Provifion Purpoſe Quadrupeds quàm quod Reafon Refpiration reft Rete mirabile Senfe take notice Terraqueous Globe thefe themſelves ther thereof theſe Things thofe thoſe Tranf Upminster uſeful Vapours Vegetables verò vitreous Humour Waters whofe wife Wings Wiſdom World Young
Popular passages
Page 437 - therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath Day. That carnal, greedy People, fo bent upon Gain, without fuch a Precept, would have fcarce favoured their own Bodies, much lefs have had Mercy upon their poor
Page 432 - ye not me? faith the Lord: will ye not tremble at my Pre'fence', which have placed the Sand for the Bound of the Sea, by a perpetual Decree, that it cannot pafs
Page 305 - The Eye cannot fay unto the Hand) I have no need of thee: Nor again, the Head to the Feet,
Page 433 - Let them praife the Name of the Lord, for his Name alone is excellent > his Glory is above the Earth and Heavens,
Page 72 - agree, who are languifhing and dying in the feculent and grofler Air of great Towns, or even the warmer, and vaporous Air of the Valleys and Waters : But contrarywife, others languifli on the Hills, and grow lufty and ftrong in the warmer Air of the Valleys. So that this Opportunity of
Page 172 - Pfal xc. 10. this, I fay,) is manifeftly an Appointment of the fame infinite Lord that ruleth the World : For, by this Means, the peopled World is kept at a convenient Stay> neither too full, nor too empty. For if Men (the Generality of them, I mean) were to live now to
Page 170 - but not to over-charge the World. Thus the Balance of the animal World, is, throughout all Ages, kept even} and by a curious Harmony, and juft Proportion between the Increafe of all Animals, and the Length of their Lives, the World is through all Ages well
Page 270 - and in cutting of Stones, to fet them -, and in carving of Timber, to •work in all Manner of Workmanjhip. So the
Page 309 - according to any of the atheiftical Schemes, or any other Method than that of the infinite Lord of the World, this wife Variety would never have been: But Mens Faces would have been caft in the fame, or not a very different Mould, their Organs of Speech would have founded the fame, or not fo great a Variety of Notes
Page 171 - The Divine Providence doth not only appear in the Longevity of Man, immediately after the Creation and Flood; but alfo in their different Longevity at thofe two Times. Immediately after the Creation, when the World was to be peopled by one Man, and one Woman, the Age