Page:The Discovery of a World in the Moone, 1638.djvu/75

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58
The Discovery

reason is because this light is discerned in many places,[1][2][3] whereas those bodies which give light by reflexion can there onely be perceived where the angle of reflexion is equall to the angle of incidence, and this is onely in one place, as in a looking-glasse those beames which are reflected from it cannot bee perceived in every place where you may see the glasse, but onely there where your eye is placed on the same line whereon the beames are reflected.

But to this I answere, that the argument will not hold of such bodies, whose superficies is full of unequall parts and gibbosities as the Moone is. Wherefore it is as well the more probable as the more common opinion, that her light proceedes from both these causes, from reflexion and illumination; nor doth it herein differ from our earth, since that also hath some light by illumination: for

  1. De cœlo. l. 2. com. 49.
  2. Ant. lection. l. 20. c. 4.
  3. De phænom. lunæ. c. 11.
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