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...-ing The text continues from the previous page. The syllable "mus" likely completes a Latin verb such as existimemus ("let us suppose" or "let us consider"). that perhaps something has been written in this work which does not correspond in every respect to the analogy of the Christian faith original: "fidei Christianæ analogiam." This is a theological principle where specific interpretations must be consistent with the broader body of established Church doctrine.; should the book therefore be suppressed? This volume contains more solid and abstruse physics original: "physicę." In the Renaissance, 'physics' referred to natural philosophy, the study of the laws of nature and the physical world. than many of the massive commentaries of certain other authors put together. Should it not be released for the common benefit of scholars? Furthermore, it seems both unjust and useless to condemn even those things which are correct and can be of great profit simply because of some human slip or error. After all, in the books of the most holy and learned Augustine St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430 AD), a foundational theologian for Western Christianity. (to pass over others), the responses of heretics, full of impiety and blasphemy, are still preserved and read to this day. I am certainly not one who would openly [advocate for] a book...