By Sir Isaac Newton

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Eafily find out, and therefore lb&all not trouble the Read der with it. Suppofe now that a Ray coming moft obliquely in theF&. nd the Line CF, into which any other Ray AC Ball be ref&&ed j let MIC, AD, be the Sines of incidence of the two Rays, and NG; EI;, their and let the eq~l Motions of ihe ‘InSines of RefiaAion, cident Rays be reprefented by the equal Lines. ed into two Motions ‘AD ‘and DC, one of which ,AD is parallel, and the other c petpei~dicL+r to the re]~n like manner, ‘jet the Motioris of the fraceing Surface.

The refi OR and 0 T remaining as before) then the Rays 0 R and other intermediate ones, For when the and laitly, the leafi refratied Rays 0 T. , and afterwards the reiZ as they are in order totally reflek’ked to N, they muit difappear in the fame order at R and T. So then the Rays which at 0. &ion, may be taken out of the Light MO whilfi the re& of the Rays remain in it, and therefore that Light MO is And beCompounded of Rays differently Refrangible. caule the Planes A B and C D are parallel, and.

Pr&u ) I. their, Parts as diRin&ly: &fined ;zs if 1 ha& Tiewed them, with thenaked Eye.. fame Objjebs plac Gcdin the Sun’s unre&a&ed Heterogeneal Light which wl;ts white I. v&cd. : canfuf&lly; II5’4 3 ” ~efrq$&ty~ as ES manifei2 by the gtk, 6th, Tth, Sth, And thofe which the firit time at and 9th Experiments. like Incidences are equally refra&ed, are again at like In* cidences equally and uniformly refrahed, and that whether they be refr;a&ed before they be fiparated from one another as in the 7 th Experiment, or whether they be red franed apart, as in the t zth, 13 th and I 4th Experiments, The Refra&tion therefore of every Ray apart is regular, 2nd what Rule that Refra&tion obferves we are now to fhew.

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