A discussion of how to discover the “true” type of this phenomenon uses the example of two identical globes connected by a cord, and appears in one of the scholia (“SKOH-lee-uh”) of a 17th-century book. “Endeavour” is the collective name for the “small beginnings” of this phenomenon, which include aversion and appetite, according to a book that distinguishes “vital” and “voluntary” forms of this phenomenon. Thomas Hobbes, who characterized “conatus” (“koh-NAY-tus”) as an infinitesimal unit of this phenomenon, defined life as a form of it in the first paragraph of Leviathan. Newton’s theory that space, time, and this phenomenon are absolute is rejected in a George Berkeley essay titled for this phenomenon in Latin. For 10 points, name this physical phenomenon which is an illusion according to Zeno’s paradoxes. ■END■
ANSWER: motion [accept movement; accept moving; accept De Motu; accept rotation until “beginnings” is read]
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= Average correct buzz position