361
Aug. 7. 1679.
m
r. Henshaw the vice Pres
t. tooke the chair
The minutes of the La
st of Iuly were read, wherevpon there was a fur
ther Di
scour
se about Persons short sighted, and of the ways of Vi
sion
from the a
ssertion of m
r Hooke that A man v
sed to see things always inuerted would
in time judge he saw them as they are. D
r. Croon queryd whence it should
come that the conception should Imagine that object erect which is repre
sented at the bottom of
the Eye Inuerted. D
r. Grew supposed it might proceed
from the Deru
ssating of the optick nerues. which might cau
se a 2
d Inuersion
m
r. Hooke supposd that could not be the cau
se since twas not generall in all creatures
and
. . . he conceiued the inuer
sion of
the opticque nerue was in none obseruable
He conceiued Rather that it proceeded from the
comparison, made by the minds
ormaking compari
son of the sensation by the eye w
th. the sensation made by
the touch. Or rather that tis an Idea or the Rule of sight implanted in
the soule by nature.
m
r. Henshaw mentiond the explanation giuen of it by Descartes who com
pares the sight to the feeling of an object by the medium of a
staff
m
r. Hill mentiond that A maid that was blind from her Infancy and neuer
saw any thing till m
r Stepkins cured her, vpon the first recouering
of her sight shee lookd on the sun, and thought shee could haue reacht
it, whence it was Inferrd that the mind Iudged of Di
stances
partly by circum
stances.
m
r Henshaw obserued that the sun in norway did very often Ri
se
& set of an ouall figure . m
r. Hooke affirmed that it was here soe
also for the mo
st part which was cau
sed by the Refraction or rather Inflecti
oof the air as he had Elswhere shewn.
S
r. I Hoskins obserud that Looking at
the sun or starrs through a small
hole made in paper made them appear Lesse then to
the naked eye
D
r. Croon Gaue the Reason of the suns appearing bigger neer the horizon from
the Dilating of
the pupull for according as the pupill was dilated the object
appeard biger of Le
sse
m
r. Hooke affirmed that if you look through a hole 100 times Le
sse then
the pupill the object will appear the same that it does to the naked
eye. when it sees it Di
stinctly but in objects too strong for the eye it
helps the eye by debilitating the rayes which otherwi
se make a fals represen
tation.
m
r. Henshaw was of opinion that the refraction of the air might
cau
se the sun to appear bigger. and that the vapours al
so might aug
ment it. D
r. Croon also was of the same opinion that the vapours
might augment it rather than the Refraction, becau
se the air con
si
st
of Parts very differing from the aether. In fauour of w
t. m
r Hen
shaw
conjecturd S
r. Iohn Hoskins affirmed that at noon Day the sun -
would appear much bigger when seen through a very thick fogg
which fogg he conjecture was nothing els but an infinite of exceeding small drops
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_363 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters