198
S
r. Iohn Hoskins objected that the motion of the muscle
could not be from the swelling or shrinking of the air
because that for that D
r. Godderd had by an Exp
t. made
in a ve
ssell of tin in w
ch.
the A mans arm was included proud
that
. . . the
. . . Arm tooke vp noe more room in the
water when the mu
scles were intented & made v
se of to
pull then w
ch. they were sufferd to Lye still w
thout strain
=ing. To which m
r Hooke answerd that that exp
t.
was not at all sufficient to proue or Di
sproue the swell
ing or shrinking of
the mu
scle. for that there being
allways some
motions /muscles/ that doe counter ballonce
the other, Look how much the one doth swell the other
doth shrink and soe the same space is always filld
by the two antagoni
st mu
scles together.
S
r. Chr: Wren suppo
sed the swelling and shrinking
might proceed from a fermentatiue motion ari
sing
from the mixture of two heterogeneous fluids
Some Difficultys occurd in this Hypothe
sis how the
motion of some mu
scles should continue soe long
after they were cutt off from the body of the Animall
mention was made of the mu
scles of the skin -
in fleaing a dead animall, of the Parts of Eeles
cutt a
sunder. of froggs after the heart lungs
and Entralls were taken out
M
r Hooke affirmed that he had ob
serued the
heart of a monk fish to beat many howers
after it was cutt out of the Body.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_200 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters