<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:np="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/ns/nonTEI" xml:id="NATP00012" type="transcription">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title>A Latin Letter … by Ignatius Gaston Pardies … containing some Animadversions upon Mr. Isaac Newton … his Theory of Light</title>
<title type="short">Critique of Newton's theory of light</title>
<author xml:id="igp"><persName key="nameid_7" sort="Pardies, Ignace Gaston" ref="nameid_7" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Ignace Gaston Pardies</persName></author>

</titleStmt>
<extent><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> <num n="word_count" value="1172">1,172</num> words</extent>

<publicationStmt>
<authority>Newton Project</authority>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>2007-03-17</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, University of Sussex</publisher>
<availability n="lic-text" status="restricted"><licence target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><p>This text is licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License</ref>.</p></licence></availability>
</publicationStmt>
<notesStmt>
<note type="metadataLine">30 March/9 April 1672 (published 17 June 1672), in Latin, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 1,165 words, 4pp.</note>
<note n="pages">4pp.</note>
<note n="language">
<p>in Latin</p>
</note>
<note n="related_texts">
<linkGrp n="document_relations" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/normalized/"><ptr type="is_responded_by" target="NATP00013">Mr Newtons Letter of April 13. 1672 … being an Answer to the fore-going Letter of P. Pardies [<hi rend="italic">Philosophical Transactions</hi> 84 (17 June 1672)]</ptr><ptr type="is_responded_by" target="NATP00310">Letter to Henry Oldenburg, dated 13 April 1672 [EL/N1/38]</ptr><ptr type="is_response_to" target="NATP00006">A Letter of Mr. Isaac Newton … containing his New Theory about Light and Colors [<hi rend="italic">Philosophical Transactions</hi> 80 (19 Feb. 1671/2)]</ptr></linkGrp>
</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc><bibl type="simple" n="custodian_3" sortKey="zz-a_latin_letter_…_by_ignatius_gaston_pardies_…_containing_some_animadversions_upon_mr._isaac_newton_…_his_theory_of_light,_philosophical_transactions_of_the_royal_society,_no._84_(17_june_1672),_pp._4087-4090." subtype="Printed">‘A Latin Letter … by Ignatius Gaston Pardies … containing some Animadversions upon Mr. Isaac Newton … his Theory of Light’,  <hi rend="italic">Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society</hi>, No. 84 (17 June 1672), pp. 4087-4090.</bibl>
<biblStruct>
<analytic>
<author><persName ref="nameid_7" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml"><forename>Ignace</forename> <forename>Gaston</forename> <surname>Pardies</surname></persName></author>
<title>A Latin Letter … by Ignatius Gaston Pardies … containing some Animadversions upon Mr. Isaac Newton … his Theory of Light</title>
</analytic>
<monogr>
<title level="j">Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society</title>
<title level="j" type="short">Philosophical Transactions</title>
<imprint>
<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>17 June 1672</date>
<biblScope type="no">84</biblScope>
<biblScope type="pp">4087-4090</biblScope>
</imprint>
</monogr>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>
<origDate when="1672-06-17">30 March/9 April 1672 (published 17 June 1672)</origDate>
</creation>
<langUsage>
<language ident="eng">English</language>
<language ident="lat">Latin</language>
</langUsage>
<handNotes>
<handNote xml:id="printer" scribe="print">Print</handNote>
</handNotes>
</profileDesc>
<encodingDesc>
<classDecl><taxonomy><category><catDesc n="Science">Science</catDesc><category><catDesc n="Optics">Optics</catDesc><category><catDesc n="Correspondence">Correspondence</catDesc></category></category></category></taxonomy></classDecl>
</encodingDesc>
<revisionDesc>
<change when="2001-01-01" type="metadata">Catalogue information compiled by Rob Iliffe, Peter Spargo &amp; John Young</change>
<change when="2003-01-21">Tagged transcription by <name xml:id="lc">Linda Cross</name></change>
<change when="2003-08-21" status="released">Checked against original by <name xml:id="rhiggitt">Rebekah Higgitt</name></change>
<change when="2007-03-01">Coding converted to modified TEI DTD and proofed by <name xml:id="mjh">Michael Hawkins</name></change>
<change when="2009-04-20">Updated to Newton V3.0 (TEI P5 Schema) by <name>Michael Hawkins</name></change>
<change when="2011-09-29" type="metadata">Catalogue exported to teiHeader by <name>Michael Hawkins</name></change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div>
<div>
<pb xml:id="p4087" n="4087"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">(4087)</fw>
<head xml:id="hd1">A Latin Letter written to the Publisher <hi rend="italic">April</hi> 9. 1672. n. st. by <hi rend="italic">Ignatius Gaston Pardies</hi> P. Prof. of the Mathematicks in the Parisian Colledge of <hi rend="italic">Clermont</hi>; containing some Animadversions upon Mr. <hi rend="italic">Isaac Newton</hi>, Prof. of the Mathematicks in the University of <hi rend="italic">Cambridge</hi>, his <hi rend="italic">Theory of Light</hi>, printed in N<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. 80.</head>
<p rend="indent0" xml:id="par1"><hi rend="dropCap">L</hi><hi rend="italic">Egi ingeniosissimam Hypothesin de</hi> Lumine &amp; Coloribus <lb xml:id="l1"/><hi rend="italic">Clarissimi</hi> Newtoni. <hi rend="italic">Et quia nonnullam Ego operam dedi <lb xml:id="l2"/>in ista contemplatione atque Experimentis peragendis, perscriban ad <lb xml:id="l3"/>Te pauca, quæ mihi circa novam istam doctrinam occurrerunt.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par2"><hi rend="italic">Circa ipsam Luminis naturam illud profectò extraordinarium vide<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l4"/>tur quòd ait vir eruditissimus, Lumen constare ex aggregatione <lb xml:id="l5"/>infinitorum propemodum radiorum, qui suâpte indole suum quisque <lb xml:id="l6"/>colorem referant retineantque, atque adeò nati apti sint certâ qua<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l7"/>dam &amp; peculiari ratione, plus alij, alij minus, refringi: Radios <lb xml:id="l8"/>ejusmodi, dum promiscui in aperto lumine confunduntur, nullatenus <lb xml:id="l9"/>discerni, sed candorem potiùs referre; in refractione verò singulos <lb xml:id="l10"/>unius coloris ab aliis alterius coloris secerni, &amp; hoc modo secretos, <lb xml:id="l11"/>sub proprio &amp; nativo colore apparere: Ea corpora sub aliquo colore, <lb xml:id="l12"/>v. g. rubro, videri, quæ apta sint reflectere aut transmittere radi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l13"/>os solummodò rubros, &amp;c.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par3"><hi rend="italic">Istæc tam extraordinaria Hypothesis, quæ, ut ipse observat, Di<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l14"/>optricæ fundamenta evertit, praxesque hactenus institutas inutiles <lb xml:id="l15"/>reddit, tota nititur illo Experimento Prismatis Crystallini, ubi ra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l16"/>dij per foramen fenestræ intra obscurum cubiculum ingressi, ac deinde <lb xml:id="l17"/>in parietem impacti, aut in charta recepti, non in rotundum confor<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l18"/>mati</hi>, ut ipsi, ad regulas refractionum receptas attendenti, <lb xml:id="l19"/>expectandum videbatur, <hi rend="italic">sed in oblongam figuram extensi apparu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l20"/>erunt: Unde conclusit, oblongam ejusmodi figuram ex eo esse, quòd <lb xml:id="l21"/>nonnulli radij minus, nonnulli magis refringerentur.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par4"><hi rend="italic">Sed mihi quidem videtur juxta</hi> communes <hi rend="italic">&amp; receptas Dioptricæ</hi> <lb xml:id="l22"/>leges <hi rend="italic">figuram illam, non rotundam, sed oblongam esse oportere. Cùm <lb xml:id="l23"/>enim radij ex oppositis disci Solaris partibus procedentes, variam <lb xml:id="l24"/>habeant in ipso transitu Prismatis inclinationem, variè quoque re<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l25"/>fringi debent; ut cùm unorun inclinato 30 saltem minutis major <lb xml:id="l26"/>sit inclinatione aliorum, major quoque evadat illorum Refractio.</hi> <fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Igitur</hi></fw><fw place="bottomCenter" type="sig">X x x x</fw><pb xml:id="p4088" n="4088"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">(4088)</fw> <hi rend="italic">Igitur Radii oppositi, ex altera superficie Prismatis emergentes ma<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l27"/>gis divergunt &amp; divaricantur, quàm si nullatenus, aut saltem æ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l28"/>qualiter, omnes infracti processissent. Refractio autem ista radiorum <lb xml:id="l29"/>fit solummodo versùs eas partes quæ fingi possunt in planis ad axem <lb xml:id="l30"/>Prismatis rectis; nulla autem refractionis inæqualitas contingit <lb xml:id="l31"/>versùs eas partes, quæ intelliguntar in planis axi parallelis; ut <lb xml:id="l32"/>facilè demonstrari potest: superficies enim duæ Prismatis censeri <lb xml:id="l33"/>possunt inter se parallelæ, ratione habita ad inclinationem axis, cùm <lb xml:id="l34"/>singulæ ipsi axi parallelæ sint. Refractio autem per duas parallelas <lb xml:id="l35"/>planas superficies nulla computatur, quia quantum à prima superficie <lb xml:id="l36"/>radius in unam partem torquetur, tantum ab altera in oppositam <lb xml:id="l37"/>partem detorquetur. Igitur cùm radij solares è foramine per Pris<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l38"/>ma transmissi ad latera quidem non frangantur, procedunt ulterius, <lb xml:id="l39"/>perinde ac si nulla Prismatis superficies obstitisset, (habitâ, inquam, <lb xml:id="l40"/>ratione solùm ad lateralem illam divaricationem;) at verò cùm <lb xml:id="l41"/>iidem radij ad superiores seu inferiores partes, alij quidem magis, <lb xml:id="l42"/>alij verò minus, utpote inæqualiter inclinati, infringantur; necesse <lb xml:id="l43"/>est eos magis inter se divaricari, adeóque &amp; in longiorem figuram <lb xml:id="l44"/>extendi.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par5"><hi rend="italic">Quin si calculus ritè obeatur; ut radij laterales inventi sunt à <lb xml:id="l45"/><choice><abbr>Cl</abbr><expan>Clarissimo</expan></choice></hi> Newtono <hi rend="italic">in ea latitudine quæ subtendit arcum</hi> 31', <hi rend="italic">qui arcus <lb xml:id="l46"/>respondet diametro Solis; ita nullus dubito, quin illa inventa <lb xml:id="l47"/>quoque altitudo imaginis, quæ</hi> 2 <hi rend="italic">gradus &amp;</hi> 49' <hi rend="italic">subtendit, sit illa <lb xml:id="l48"/>ipsa quæ eidem diametro Solis post inæquales refractiones in illo <lb xml:id="l49"/>ipso casu respondeat.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par6"><figure rend="floatLeft"><graphic url="NATP00012-1.png"/><figDesc/></figure><hi rend="italic">Et reverà, posito <lb xml:id="l50"/>Prismate</hi> A B C, <hi rend="italic">cu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l51"/>jus angulus</hi> A <hi rend="italic">sit</hi> 60 <lb xml:id="l52"/><hi rend="italic">grad. Radio</hi> D E, <hi rend="italic">qui <lb xml:id="l53"/>faciat cum perpendi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l54"/>culari</hi> E H <hi rend="italic">angulum</hi> <lb xml:id="l55"/>30 <hi rend="italic">grad. Invenio il<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l56"/>lum, dum emergit per</hi> <lb xml:id="l57"/>F G, <hi rend="italic">facere cum per<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l58"/>pendiculari</hi> F I <hi rend="italic">angu<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l59"/>lum</hi> 76 <hi rend="italic">gr</hi>. 22'. <hi rend="italic">At ve<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l60"/>rò posito alio radio</hi> d <lb xml:id="l61"/>E, <hi rend="italic">qui cum perpendi-</hi> <fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">culari</hi></fw><pb xml:id="p4089" n="4089"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">(4089)</fw> <hi rend="italic">culari</hi> E H <hi rend="italic">faciat angulum</hi> 29<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. 30', <hi rend="italic">invenio illum, dum emergit <lb xml:id="l62"/>per</hi> f g, <hi rend="italic">facere cum perpendiculari</hi> f i, <hi rend="italic">angulum</hi> 78<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. 45'. <hi rend="italic">Unde isti <lb xml:id="l63"/>duo radij</hi> D E, d E, <hi rend="italic">qui procedere supponuntur ex oppositis partibus <lb xml:id="l64"/>disci Solaris, faciuntque inter se angulum</hi> 30', <hi rend="italic">iidem dum emergunt <lb xml:id="l65"/>per lineas</hi> F g, f g, <hi rend="italic">ita divergunt ut constituant angulum inter se</hi> 2 <lb xml:id="l66"/><hi rend="italic">gr</hi>. 23'. <hi rend="italic">Quod si duo alij radij assumerentur magis accendentes ad <lb xml:id="l67"/>perpendicularem</hi> E H, (<hi rend="italic">v. g. qui cum eadem perpendiculari facerent, <lb xml:id="l68"/>unus quidem, angulum</hi> 29<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. 30', <hi rend="italic">alter verò</hi>, 29<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. 0';) <hi rend="italic">tunc iidem ra<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l69"/>dij emergentes magis adhuc divergerent, constituerentque angulum <lb xml:id="l70"/>majorem etiam aliquando plus quàm trium graduum. Et præterea <lb xml:id="l71"/>augetur ulterius ista intercapedo refractorum radiorum ex eo, quod <lb xml:id="l72"/>duo radij</hi> D E, d E, <hi rend="italic">concurrentes in</hi> E, <hi rend="italic">illico incipiunt divaricari, <lb xml:id="l73"/>atque impingunt in duo puncta disjuncta alterius superficiei, nempe <lb xml:id="l74"/>in</hi> F <hi rend="italic">&amp; in</hi> f. <hi rend="italic">Quapropter non sufficit ad obeundum ritè calculum, ex <lb xml:id="l75"/>longintudine imaginis impactæ in chartam subtrahere magnitudinem fo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l76"/>raminins fenestræ; quandoquidem etiam posito foramine indivisibili</hi> <lb xml:id="l77"/>E, <hi rend="italic">adhuc fieret aliud veluti foramen latum in alia superficie, nempe</hi> <lb xml:id="l78"/>F.f.</p>
<p xml:id="par7"><hi rend="italic">Quod etiam vocat</hi> Experimentum crucis,<hi rend="italic">mihi quidem videtur <lb xml:id="l79"/>quadrare cum vulgaribus &amp; receptis Refractionum regulis. Nam, ut <lb xml:id="l80"/>modo ostendi, radij solares, qui accedentes &amp; convergentes faciunt <lb xml:id="l81"/>angulum</hi> 30', <hi rend="italic">egredientes deinde etiam post indivisible foramen di<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l82"/>vergunt in angulum duorum &amp; trium grad. Quapropter non mirum, <lb xml:id="l83"/>si isti radij, sigillatim impingentes in alterum Prisma, perexiguo <lb xml:id="l84"/>item apertum foramine, inæqualiter infringantur, cùm sit inæqualis <lb xml:id="l85"/>illorum inclinatio. Neque refert, quòd isti radij attollantur aut <lb xml:id="l86"/>deprimantur per conversionem primi Prismatis, manente immoto se<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l87"/>cundo Prismate, (quod tamen in omni casu fieri non potest) vel quód <lb xml:id="l88"/>manente primo immobili, secundum moveatur, ut successivè radios co<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l89"/>loratos totius imaginis excipiat &amp; per proprium foramen transmittat; <lb xml:id="l90"/>utrolibet enim modo necesse est radios illos extremos, hoc est</hi>, Rubrum <lb xml:id="l91"/>&amp; Violaceum, <hi rend="italic">incidere in secundum Prisma sub inæquali angulo, a<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l92"/>deoque eorundem refractionem esse inæqualem, ut</hi> Violaceorum <hi rend="italic">sit <lb xml:id="l93"/>major.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par8"><hi rend="italic">Cùm igitur manifesta causa appareat oblongæ ejusmodi figuræ radi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l94"/>orum, causaque illa ex ipsa natura Refractionis oriatur; non vide<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l95"/>tur necesse recurrere ad aliam Hypothesin, aut admittere diversam il<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l96"/>lam radiorum</hi> frangibilitatem.</p>
<fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><hi rend="italic">Quod</hi></fw><fw place="bottomCenter" type="sig">X x x x 2</fw><pb xml:id="p4090" n="4090"/><fw type="pag" place="topRight">(4090)</fw>
<p xml:id="par9"><hi rend="italic">Quod deinde excogitavit de</hi> Coloribus, <hi rend="italic">illud quidem egre<lb xml:id="l97"/>giè consequitur ex precedente Hypothesi; veruntamen nonnullus <lb xml:id="l98"/>&amp; ipsum patitur difficultates. Nam quod ait, nullum colorem, <lb xml:id="l99"/>sed potius</hi> candorem <hi rend="italic">apparere, ubi omnes omnium colorum <lb xml:id="l100"/>radij promiscuè confunduntur, id verò non videtur conforme om<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l101"/>nibus phænomenis. Certè quæ variationes cernuntur in permisti<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l102"/>one diversorum corporum, diversis coloribus imbutorum, eæ<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l103"/>dem ominò observantur in permistione diversorum radiorum diversis <lb xml:id="l104"/>item coloribus imbutorum: Atque optimè ipse advertit, quòd quem<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l105"/>admodum ex flavo &amp; cæruleo corpore exsurgit viridis color; ita ex <lb xml:id="l106"/>flavo &amp; cæruleo radio viridis item color efficitur. Quare si omnes <lb xml:id="l107"/>omnium colorum radii simul confunderentur, necesse esset in ista hypo<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l108"/>thesi, ut ille color appareret, qui revera apparet in permixtione om<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l109"/>nium pigmentorum. Atqui si ista, hoc est, rubrum simul &amp; flavum <lb xml:id="l110"/>unà cum cæruleo &amp; purpureo aliisque omnibus, si quæ sint, conte<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l111"/>rantur &amp; confundantur, non jam candidus, sed obscurus &amp; satur <lb xml:id="l112"/>color exsurget. Ergo similis color appareret in lumine ordinario, <lb xml:id="l113"/>quod constaret ex aggregatione omnium colorum.</hi></p>
<p xml:id="par10"><hi rend="italic">Præterea nihil primo aspectu magis ingeniosum magisque aptum <lb xml:id="l114"/>videtur, quàm quod ait circa experimentum acutissimi</hi> Hookii, <lb xml:id="l115"/><hi rend="italic">quo duo diversi liquores, quorum alter rubeus, alter cæruleus, uterque sigillatim pellucidus, simul permixti, opaci evadunt. Id au<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l116"/>tem ait Clarissimus</hi> Newtonus <hi rend="italic">ex eo oriri, quòd unus liquor solos <lb xml:id="l117"/>rubeos natus sit transmittere, alter verò solos flavos; unde per<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l118"/>misti nullos transmittent. Hoc, inquam, videtur statim valdè <lb xml:id="l119"/>appositum; nihilominus tamen ex eo conficeretur, quòd similis <lb xml:id="l120"/>opacitas fieret in permistione quorumcunque liquorum qui essent di<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l121"/>versi coloris; quod tamen verum non est.</hi></p>
</div>
<fw type="catch" place="bottomRight"><foreign xml:lang="eng">Mr. <hi rend="italic">Newtons</hi></foreign></fw>
</div>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>