Page:The Analyst; or, a Discourse Addressed to an Infidel Mathematician.djvu/79

Rh the lat, may be perhaps harpighted enough to conceive thee things. But mot Men will, I believe, find it impoible to undertand them in any ene whatever.

XLV. One would think that Men could not peak too exactly on o nice a Subject. And yet, as was before hinted, we may often oberve that the Exponents of Fluxions or Notes repreenting Fluxions are confounded with the Fluxions themelves. Is not this the Cae, when jut after the Fluxions of flowing Quantities were aid to be the Celerities of their increaing, and the econd Fluxions to be the mutations of the firt Fluxions or Celerities, we are told that $$\textstyle{\overset{''}{z}. \overset{'}{z}. z. \dot{z}. \ddot{\ddot{z}}. \dot{\ddot{z}}.}$$ repreents a Series of Quantities, whereof each ubequent Quantity is the Fluxion of the preceding; and each foregoing is a fluent Quantity having the following one for its Fluxion?

XLVI. Divers Series of Quantities and Expreions, Geometrical and Algebraical, Rh