622
R Hooke Read a Lecture ^ /in pro
secution of his Former Lectures/ concerning the Great mutations that haue sometimes been cau
sed of the superficiall parts of
the Earth. and Particularly in answer to the great Obiection made again
st it by alledging that there were noe ^ /antient or modern/ historys that had
Recorded any such catastrophys, producing seuerall pa
ssages out of Strabo's Geography that very much concurred
with the Doctrine, who has diuers others al
so very much to the same purpo
se, tho
se he mentiond were taken out of Authours that had writ
ten Long before the time ^ /of Strabo/ and were then accounted very antient. who tis probable had ^ /Receiued/ them from others that were before them, for that
Strabo does most insist vpon their philosophicall Explication of the phenomena. and though he takes it for Granted that all the Coun
try between the temple of Iupiter Ammon had been Left by, or ^ /rather/ Rai
sed from vnder the Sea according to his ^/own/ Explication of it, yet he does
not Specify the time when that mutation was made.
Before he ^/the sphere Hook/ further added, that though he had complyed in this matter
of Producing Authoritys & Historys for the
Comfo strengthning of that Doctrine yet he conceiued that the arguments for it were
Drawn from Such Self Euident Principles as Stood in need of noe such helps. And vpon the Same account conceiued that the
newly mentiond phenomenon of the Broad black belt of the Rainbow. though it had hitherto pa
st without being taken
notice of by any authour, either antient or Modern, yet from the reason and Cau
se of its appearance it may as Certain
ly be concluded to haue appeared in the first Rainbow after Noahs Flood as if there were any certain Record or history
tht it did Soe. vpon the same around as many Learned men haue concluded that the Phenomenon of the ^ /coloured/ Rainbow did appear
/though noe history mentions such appearance & /al
so before the flood though it were not made a Symboll or Signe to mankind that the earth should not be all ouerwhelmed
/till after Noahs Flood/
with water. but this way of Probation must be founded vpon certain principles as well as vpon
rightly /a true method of/ syllogi
sing Lea
st the
. . .conclu
sions prove like that of Hezge
sius who would prove the Wonderfull new star of i572 to be as old as any of the other Stars
founding his conclusion on /because by/ the Doctrine of Aristotle
that noe coele
stiall body
was /is/ subject to any alteration or change.
Lastly to adde further Euidence to the ground from which he reasoned. he Produced the Curiously shaped flints that had been
presented to the Society the preceeding meeting. by seuerall Remarks about which he thought it might evidently appeare to
any unpreiudiced person, that tho
se shapes and marks had Really been moulded off from the shells of
the E a species of
the Ecticjs, and that the sub
stance of the flint had at first been as fluid as water

which flints being found in beds of Chalk and
tho
se bedds sometimes very farr within the earth below its surface and
in sometimes at great heights in
. . Chalk hills doe Evidence
to Speak that there must haue formerly hapned very great mutations of the superficiall parts of the earth, which was the doctrine
he Indeauoured to proue.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_624 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters