Origines Sacrae: Or, A Rational Account of the Grounds of Natural and Revealed Religion ... Together with a Letter to a Deist, Volume 2The University Press, 1836 - Apologetics |
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... give of the fall of man , doth not charge God with man's fault . God's power to govern man by laws , though he gives no particular reason of every positive precept . VI . The reason of God's creating man with freedom of will , largely ...
... give of the fall of man , doth not charge God with man's fault . God's power to govern man by laws , though he gives no particular reason of every positive precept . VI . The reason of God's creating man with freedom of will , largely ...
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... give motion to that which had it not before ; and so all that can be proved is the necessity of some first cause , which we assert , but no necessity at all of his continual acting , since he may cause motion when he pleases . And for ...
... give motion to that which had it not before ; and so all that can be proved is the necessity of some first cause , which we assert , but no necessity at all of his continual acting , since he may cause motion when he pleases . And for ...
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... give a being to that which had none before ? For that is all we under- stand by creation , viz . the producing of something out of nothing , or which had nothing out of which it was produced . Now what repugnancy is there to any free X ...
... give a being to that which had none before ? For that is all we under- stand by creation , viz . the producing of something out of nothing , or which had nothing out of which it was produced . Now what repugnancy is there to any free X ...
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... give a tolerable account of many appearances of nature , that therefore there should be nothing else but matter and motion in the world , and that the origin of the uni- verse should be from no wiser principle than the casual concourse ...
... give a tolerable account of many appearances of nature , that therefore there should be nothing else but matter and motion in the world , and that the origin of the uni- verse should be from no wiser principle than the casual concourse ...
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... give , according to this hypothesis , of all the phenomena of the uni- verse , is from the fortuitous concourse of the atoms in the first forming of the world , and the different con- texture of them in bodies . And this was delivered ...
... give , according to this hypothesis , of all the phenomena of the uni- verse , is from the fortuitous concourse of the atoms in the first forming of the world , and the different con- texture of them in bodies . And this was delivered ...
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Origines Sacrae; Or a Rational Account of the Grounds of Natural ..., Volume 1 Edward Stillingfleet No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
Anaxagoras Anaximander ancient animals appears argument Aristotle asserted atheistical atoms body BOOK called Cartes Chalcidius CHAP Cicero concerning consider contrivance creatures Cronus Deity Democritus deny Diodorus Siculus discourse Divine doctrine doth earth Egypt Egyptians Epicurean Epicurus eternal Euhemerus evident final causes give an account God's gods Greece Greeks ground happiness hath heat heathen heaven Herodotus Hist hypothesis idea imagine immortality infinite kind laws of motion lived Lucretius mankind manner matter men's mind Moses nature Noah observed opinion origin of evil Orpheus particles Pelasgi persons philosophers Phoenicians Plato Plin Plutarch preserved pretend principles produced prove Providence Pythagoras reason religion saith Scriptures sect sense shew Socrates soul speaks STILLINGFLEET Strabo substance superstition suppose testimony Thales thence things thought tion true truth understand universe whence wherein wisdom wise worship Xenoph δὲ καὶ τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τοῦ τῶν