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aright, and distinctly perceive anything by it. Of this character are the demonstrations of mathematics, the
knowledge that material things exist, and the clear reasonings that are formed regarding them. The results I
have given in this treatise will perhaps be admitted to a place in the class of truths that are absolutely certain,
if it be considered that they are deduced in a continuous series from the first and most elementary principles
of human knowledge; especially if it be sufficiently understood that we can perceive no external objects
unless some local motion be caused by them in our nerves, and that such motion cannot be caused by the
fixed stars, owing to their great distance from us, unless a motion be also produced in them and in the whole
heavens lying between them and us: for these points being admitted, all the others, at least the more general
doctrines which I have advanced regarding the world or earth [e. g., the fluidity of the heavens, Part III.,
Section XLVI.], will appear to be almost the only possible explanations of the phenomena they present.
CCVII. That, however, I submit all my opinions to the authority of the church.
Nevertheless, lest I should presume too far, I affirm nothing, but submit all these my opinions to the authority
of the church and the judgment of the more sage; and I desire no one to believe anything I may have said,
unless he is constrained to admit it by the force and evidence of reason.
PART IV. OF THE EARTH. 41
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