Page:The Analyst; or, a Discourse Addressed to an Infidel Mathematician.djvu/101

Rh Extenions, it will not follow that unlimited Approximations compleatly anwer the Intention of Geometry? Qu. 54. Whether the ame things which are now done by Infinites may not be done by finite Quantities? And whether this would not be a great Relief to the Imaginations and Undertandings of Mathematical Men? Qu. 55. Whether thoe Philomathematical Phyicians, Anatomits, and Dealers in the Animal Oeconomy, who admit the Doctrine of Fluxions with an implicit Faith, can with a good grace inult other Men for believing what they do not comprehend? Qu. 56. Whether the Corpucularian, Experimental, and Mathematical Philoophy o much cultivated in the lat Age, hath not too much engroed Mens Attention; ome part whereof it might have uefully employed? Qu. 57. Whe-