Origines Sacrae Or a Rational Account of the Grounds of Natural and Revealed Religion: To which is Added Part of Another Book Upon the Same Subject, Left Unfinished by the Author : Together with a Letter to a Deist, Volume 2University Press, 1836 - 542 pages |
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... Greek philoso- phers ; of Pythagoras , Plato , the Stoics ; the origin of evil not from XV , XVI . The remainders of the history the necessity of matter . of the fall among the heathens . XVII , XVIII , XIX . Of the ma- lignity of ...
... Greek philoso- phers ; of Pythagoras , Plato , the Stoics ; the origin of evil not from XV , XVI . The remainders of the history the necessity of matter . of the fall among the heathens . XVII , XVIII , XIX . Of the ma- lignity of ...
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... Greeks . XIII . Whence these Pelasgi came ; that Phaleg was the Pelasgus of Greece , and the leader of that colony ... Greek language , and the remainders of the eastern languages in the islands of Greece ; both which not from the ...
... Greeks . XIII . Whence these Pelasgi came ; that Phaleg was the Pelasgus of Greece , and the leader of that colony ... Greek language , and the remainders of the eastern languages in the islands of Greece ; both which not from the ...
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... Greeks , ( about the 40th Olympiad , when we may suppose Thales to flourish , ) the beginning of the world was no matter of dispute ; but , taking that for granted , the inquiry was , out of what material principle the universe was ...
... Greeks , ( about the 40th Olympiad , when we may suppose Thales to flourish , ) the beginning of the world was no matter of dispute ; but , taking that for granted , the inquiry was , out of what material principle the universe was ...
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... Greeks . For which we have this evident reason , that Greece was far more barbarous and rude in its elder times , than those other nations were , which had means of preserving some monuments and general re- ports of the first ages of ...
... Greeks . For which we have this evident reason , that Greece was far more barbarous and rude in its elder times , than those other nations were , which had means of preserving some monuments and general re- ports of the first ages of ...
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... Greeks for wisdom and learning , did in ancient time resort to Egypt , to be acquainted with their laws and knowledge . On this account , therefore , we are not to seek for the ancient and genuine tradition of the world from the native ...
... Greeks for wisdom and learning , did in ancient time resort to Egypt , to be acquainted with their laws and knowledge . On this account , therefore , we are not to seek for the ancient and genuine tradition of the world from the native ...
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Anaxagoras Anaximander ancient animals appears argument Aristotle asserted atheistical atoms bodies BOOK called Cartes cause Chalcidius CHAP Christian Cicero concerning consider creatures Deity Democritus Diodorus Diodorus Siculus discourse Divine doctrine doth earth Egypt Egyptians Epicurean Epicurus eternal Euhemerus evident flood give an account God's gods Greece Greeks ground hath heathen heaven Herodotus Hierocles hypothesis imagine infinite Jews language laws lived Lucretius mankind manner matter men's mind Moses motion nations nature Noah observed opinion origin of evil particles Pelasgi persons Phaleg philosophers Phoenicians Plato Plutarch posterity preserved pretend principle produced prove Providence punishment Pythagoras reason religion saith Scriptures sect sense shew Socrates soul speaks STILLINGFLEET Strabo substance suppose tells testimony Thales thence things thought tion true truth ture understand universe Vossius whence wherein wisdom worship γὰρ δὲ ἐν καὶ τὰ τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τὸν τοῦ τῶν