Page:The Analyst; or, a Discourse Addressed to an Infidel Mathematician.djvu/100

90 Qu. 49. Whether there be not really a Philoophia prima, a certain trancendental Science uperior to and more extenive than Mathematics, which it might behove our modern Analyts rather to learn than depie? Qu. 50. Whether ever ince the recovery of Mathematical Learning, there have not been perpetual Diputes and Controveries among the Mathematicians? And whether this doth not diparage the Evidence of their Methods? Qu. 51. Whether any thing but Metaphyics and Logic can open the Eyes of Mathematicians and extricate them out of their Difficulties?

Qu. 52. Whether upon the received Principles a Quantity can by any Diviion or Subdiviion, though carried ever o far, be reduced to nothing? Qu. 53. Whether if the end of Geometry be Practice, and this Practice be Meauring, and we meaure only ble