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 2 |
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[ No arguing from the present state of the world against its beginning , shewed from Maimonides . ] VII . The Platonists ' arguments , from the goodness of God for the eternity of the world , answered . VIII .
[ No arguing from the present state of the world against its beginning , shewed from Maimonides . ] VII . The Platonists ' arguments , from the goodness of God for the eternity of the world , answered . VIII .
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Epicurus's arguments against it refuted . The necessity of the belief of Providence in order to religion . III . Providence proved from a consideration of the nature of God and the things of the world . Of the spirit of nature . IV .
Epicurus's arguments against it refuted . The necessity of the belief of Providence in order to religion . III . Providence proved from a consideration of the nature of God and the things of the world . Of the spirit of nature . IV .
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( No arguing from the present state of the world against its beginning , shewed from Maimonides . ] VII . The Platonists ' arguments , from the goodness of God for the eternity of the world , answered . VIII . Of the stoical hypothesis ...
( No arguing from the present state of the world against its beginning , shewed from Maimonides . ] VII . The Platonists ' arguments , from the goodness of God for the eternity of the world , answered . VIII . Of the stoical hypothesis ...
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Hence came the hot and eager contests between Proclus , Simplicius , and Philoponus ; who undertook to answer Proclus's eighteen arguments for the eternity of the world , and to charge Aristotle with self - contradiction in reference to ...
Hence came the hot and eager contests between Proclus , Simplicius , and Philoponus ; who undertook to answer Proclus's eighteen arguments for the eternity of the world , and to charge Aristotle with self - contradiction in reference to ...
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For all the arguments which either Ocellus , or Aristotle , or the modern Platonists make use of , are built on these following suppositions ; which are all false . 1. That it is unconceivable that things should ever have been in any ...
For all the arguments which either Ocellus , or Aristotle , or the modern Platonists make use of , are built on these following suppositions ; which are all false . 1. That it is unconceivable that things should ever have been in any ...
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according ancient animals answer appears argument Aristotle asserted atoms beginning believe better bodies BOOK called Cartes cause CHAP Christian clear comes common concerning consider continue deny Divine doth earth Egyptians Epicurus eternal evident evil excellent existence fall flood follow force formed give given God's greater greatest Greece Greeks ground happiness hath heaven hypothesis idea imagine infinite Italy kind language laws learned lived looked mankind manner matter means mind motion nature necessary never object observed opinion origin particles particular persons philosophers Plato Plutarch possible present preserved principle probable produced prove Providence reason received religion saith Scriptures seems sense serve shew soul space speaks substance sufficient suppose taken tells thence things thought tion true truth understand universe whence whole worship και