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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53055 The philosphical and physical opinions written by Her Excellency the Lady Marchionesse of Newcastle. Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of, 1624?-1674. 1655 (1655) Wing N863; ESTC R31084 172,000 202

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the custom of their breeding in the Schools of Aristotle and Socrates and the rest of ancient Authors or else they consider not my opinions enough for if they did they might see as much probability for mine as any of their opinions For though in natural Philosophy there may be many touches found out by experiences and experiments yet the Study is onely conjecturally and built upon probabilities and until probabilities be condemned by absolute and known truth let them have a place amongst the rest of probabilities and be not so partial to contradict as to be unjust to me take not away the right of my place because young for though age ought to have respect yet not so as to do youth wrong but I hope my new born opinions will be nourished in Noble and learned Schools and bred up with industrious Students but howsoever I delight my self for next to the finding out of truthes the greatest pleasure in Study is to finde out probabilities I make no question but after Ages will esteem this work of mine but what soever is new is not received at the first with that good acceptation by reason it is utterly unknown unto them and a newnesse and an unacquaintednesse makes the ignorance but when time hath made acquaintance and a right understanding and a right understanding will make a friendship betwixt Fame and my Book OF FORTUNE PART II. CHAP. 59. MAtter Figure and Motions are the gods that Create fortune For fortune is nothing in it self but various motions gathered or drawn to a point which point man onely thinks it fixt upon him but he is deceived for it fixes upon all other things for if any thing comes and rubs off the bark of a tree or breaks the tree it is a miss-fortune to that tree and if a house be built in such a place as to shelter a tree from great storms or cold weather it were good fortune to that tree and if a beast be hurt it is a miss-fortune to that beast or bird and when a beast or bird is brought up for pleasure or delight and not to work or be imprisoned it is a good fortune to that beast or bird but as I said before fortune is onely various motions drawn to a point and that point that comes from crosse motions we call bad fortune and those that come from Sympathetical motions we call good fortune and there must needs be Antipathetical Motions as well as Sympathetical Motions since Motions are so various But man and for all that I know all other things are governed by outward Objects they rule and we obey for we do not rule and they Obey but every thing is led like dogs in a string by a stronger power but the outward power being invisible makes us think we set the rules and not the outward Causes so that we are governed by that which is without us not that which is within us for man hath no power over himself Chap. 60. Of time and Nature NO question but there is a time in Nature for time is the Variation of Nature and nature is a producing Motion a multiplying figure an endlesse measure a quantilesse substance an indefaisable matter Chap. 61. Of Matter Motion and Figure AS I said before in my first part of my Book that there is no first Matter nor no first Motion because Eternal and Infinite yet there could be no Motion without matter for Matter is the cause Motion but the effect of Matter for there could be no motion unlesse there were Matter to be moved But there might be Matter and Figure without Motion as an infinite and eternal dull lump For I see no reason but infinite might be without running forward or circle-wayes if there were not several degrees of the onely Matter wherein Motion is an Infinite Eternal effect of such a degree Neither is it nonsense to say Figure is the effect of Matter for though there is no Matter without Figure yet there could be no figure without Matter wherefore Matter is the prime cause of Figure yet there could be no figure without matter wherefore matter is the prime cause of figure but not figure of matter for figure doth not make matter but matter figure no more then the creature can make the Creator but a creature may make a figure Thus although there is no first matter yet matter is the first cause of motion and figure and all effects Although they are as infinite and Eternal as matter it self and when I say Matter prime I speak for distinction sake which is the onely Matter The innated Matter is the soul of Nature The dull part of Matter the Body And the infinite figures are the infinite form of Nature And the several motions are the several actions of nature Chap. 62. Of Causes and effects AS I have said before the effects are infinite and eternal as the Causes because all effects lie in matter and motion indeed in matter onely for motion is but the effect of matter Wherefore all particular figures although dssiolvable yet is inherent in the matter and motion as for example if a man can draw the picture of a man or any thing else although he never draws it yet the Art is inherent in the man and the picture in the Art as long as the man lives so as long as there is matter and motion which was from all Eternity and shall be eternally the effect will be so Chap. 63. Whether motion is a thing or nothing or can be Annihilated SOme have opinion that Motion is nothing but to my reason it is a thing for if matter is a substance a substance is a thing and the motion and matter being unseparablely united makes it but one thing For as there could be no motion without such a degree or extract of matter so there could be no such degree or extract of matter without motion thus motion is a thing But by reason particular motions leave moving in such matters and figures shall we say they are deceased dead or become nothing but say some motions are accidents and accidents are nothing but I say all accidents live in substance as all effects in the causes say some when a man for example shakes his hand and when he leaves shaking whether is that motion gone say others no where for that particular motion ceaseth to be say they I answer that my reason tells me it is neither fled away nor ceased to be for it remains in the hand and in that matter that created the hand that is in that and the like innated matter that is in the hand But some will say the hand never moves so again but I say the motion is never the lesse there they may as well say when they have seen a Chest full of Gold or the like and when their eyes are shut or that they never see it more that the Gold doth not lie in the Chest although the Gold may lie there eternally