Book
1 1| the natural tendency of a vacuum to become refilled, whenonce
2 1| be from the tendency of a vacuum to becomerefilled. Concerning
3 1| tendency of matterto fill a vacuum, for, if this were so, nobody
4 1| no more can flow into a vacuum than hasrun out. For, if
5 1| thistendency by which a vacuum becomes refilled, no more
6 1| concerning the fillingof a vacuum. This, however, is deprived
7 2| merely from the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled. Now,
8 2| principle of the refilling of a vacuum may be looked on as a necessary
9 2| principle of the refilling of a vacuum, especially if we assume
10 2| about the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled; this
11 2| that matter tends to fill a vacuum, as we previously showed,
12 2| virtue of the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled? For,
13 2| that any "refilling of a vacuum" should take place, since
14 2| should take place, since no vacuum can occur in a continuum
15 2| states that it is not a vacuum such as this, interspersed
16 2| treatises deal with, but a vacuum which is clear, perceptible,
17 2| principle of the refilling of a vacuum can give them no help -
18 2| that the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled is unable
19 2| veins to the principle of vacuum refilling alone, let him
20 2| question of the refilling of a vacuum being in operation, and
21 3| respecting the tendency of a vacuum to become refilled. ~ 14.
22 3| the tendency by which a vacuum becomes refilled, the lightest
23 3| principle of the refilling of a vacuum the lighter matter is always
24 3| attraction, that by which a vacuum becomes refilled and that
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