Date: 1615
"For as in that celestiall part, the Sun is predominant, by whose motion, beames, and light, all things haue their brightnesse, luster, and beauty; so in the middest of the chest, the heart resideth, whose likenesse and proportion with the Sun, is such and so great, as the ancient writers haue be...
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"Whose arguments we will here scite before the tribunall of Reason"
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"[W]e are also of [Adam's] off-spring; not that I conceive (as some blasphemously have done) that he was made out of the very essence of God, but because the image of the divine nature, is most lively imprinted in his soul and in his body, and in the substance & qualities of them both. For the So...
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"For that first matter receiveth but particular and individual forms, and that without understanding: in the Soul are imprinted the universal forms of things, and it hath also understanding to judge of them."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"For in it is a lively resemblance of the ineffable Trinity, represented by the three principal faculties, Memory, Understanding, and Will."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"As the soul of man is of all sublunary formes the most noble, so his Body, the house of the soul, doth so far excel, as it may well be called [μετρσ], the measure and rule of all other bodies."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"Secondly, that the functions and offices of the outward senses, which are all placed as it were a guard in pension, in the palace of the head, and in the view and presence Chamber of Reason, which is their sovereign, might in a more excellent manner be exercised and put in practice."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"This Little World therefore, which we call Man, is a great miracle, and his frame and composition is more to be admired and wondered at, then the workmanship of the whole Universe."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"The eyes are the discouerers of the mind, as the countenance is the Image of the same; by the eyes as by a window, you may looke euen into the secret corners of the Soule: so that it was well sayde of Alexander ... that the eyes are the mirror or Looking-glasse of the Soule."
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"First, of all living creatures, only man hath a head made into a round and circular form, as it were turned on a wheel, both that it might be the more capable to receive a greater quantity of brains, and less apt to be over-taken with danger either from without or within; as also, for the more ...
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)