| John Locke - Conduct of life - 1880 - 386 pages
...have any mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better, if men generally rested in such an idea of God, without being too curious in their notions about a Being, which all must acknowledge incomprehensible; whereby many, who have not strength and clearness of thought, to... | |
| John Lubbock - Conduct of life - 1894 - 336 pages
...have any Mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better if Men generally rested in such an Idea of God, without being too curious in their Notions about a being which all must acknowledge incomprehensible — whereby many, who have not Strength and Clearness of Thought... | |
| John Locke - Education - 1912 - 292 pages
...have any mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better, if men generally rested in such an idea of God, without being too curious in their notions about a being, which all must acknowledge incomprehensible ; whereby many, who have not strength and clearness of thought to... | |
| John Locke - Education - 1922 - 294 pages
...have any mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better, if men generally rested in such an idea of God, without being too curious in their notions about a being, which all must acknowledge incomprehensible ; whereby many, who have not strength and clearness of thought to... | |
| Francis Oakley - History - 1999 - 382 pages
...John Locke (Cambridge, 1968), p. 242: "... I think it would be better if Men generally rested in such an Idea of God, without being too Curious in their Notions about a Being, which all must acknowledge incomprehensible;. . . And I am apt to think, the keeping children constantly'Morning... | |
| Nathan Tarcov - Education - 1999 - 292 pages
...incomprehensible; for Locke remarks here, "And I think it would be better if Men generally rested in such an Idea of God, without being too Curious in their Notions about a Being, which all must acknowledge incomprehensible."18 Curiosity is not necessarily a virtue; it is one only when it... | |
| Natalie Fuehrer Taylor - Biography & Autobiography - 2007 - 228 pages
...enough for grown men and women too. "And I think it would be better if men generally rested in such an idea of God without being too curious in their notions about a Being which all must acknowledge incomprehensible" (STCE, 103). True to his suggestion of the limits of human capacity... | |
| John Locke - Education - 1886 - 320 pages
...Mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better if Men generally rested in such an 20 Idea of God, without being too curious in their Notions about 'a Being which all must acknowledge incomprehensible ; whereby many, who have not Strength and Clearness of Thought to... | |
| John Locke - Education - 1988 - 328 pages
...Mistakes, you must set right. And I think it would be better if Men generally rested in such an 20 Idea of God, without being too curious in their Notions about a Being which all must acknowledge incomprehensible; whereby many, who have not Strength and Clearness of Thought to... | |
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