551
Iune. 28. 1682.
S
r. Iohn Hoskins tooke the chair -
the minutes of the preceding meeting being Read and Di
scorsed
there being seuerall persons present who were not here at the
La
st meeting: as S
r. William Petty /S
r Iohn Hoskins/ S
r. Rob: Southwell m
r Hen
shaw
mo
r. Iustell. Mo
r. Auzout and seuerall others who were not
present the La
st Day at the Reading of the Di
scour
se menti
ond It was De
sired by them that m
r. Hook should Read
the same againe, which he accordingly Did.
After which some obiected as if this Discour
se had
tended to proue the soule mechanicall to which m
r.
Hooke answered that there was noe such thing hinted
or in the Lea
st Intended It being only intended to shew
that the soule did forme for its own v
se certaine corpore
all Ideas which It stored vp in the Repository or organ of
memory, and that by its power of being Immediately sensible
of tho
se Ideas wheneuer it exerted its power for that end
It thereby became sensible of tho
se Ideas formerly made
as if they were made at that present but w
th this Differ
rence that the farther they were remoued from the cen
ter or seat of its more Immediat momentary Re
si=
dence the more faint were the Reflections or Reactions
from them, and that occa
siond the notion of the Di
stance
of time.
m
r. Hooke shewed a ^ /very
plaine & ea
sy/ way of plainly Demon
strating the
Problem of Archimedes whereby he proues that the
tangent of his spirall at the point of one Reuolution
from the Center will cutt a Ray Produced from the
center at Right angles to the ^ /ray/ from the toucht point
soe that the part between the point of Intersection and
the centrer shall be equall to the circumference of
the circle that pa
sses through the point of the spirall
where the said tangent doth touch it, which was
performed w
thout any /supporting/ praecognita in Geometry known.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_553 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters