The Citizen of NatureW. Benbow, 1824 - 238 Seiten |
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Seite 13
... proof , their several natures will admit . " You need not wander far in search of that which lies within your own bosom , " said he : " your conscience , that voice whose still small whispers you yet scarce hear through the mist of ...
... proof , their several natures will admit . " You need not wander far in search of that which lies within your own bosom , " said he : " your conscience , that voice whose still small whispers you yet scarce hear through the mist of ...
Seite 14
... proof : what that proof is , I will hereafter shew you ; but it remains for you to be convinced , that certain actions and facts are Right or Wrong , ought or ought not to be , from their concordance , or discordance with that voice ...
... proof : what that proof is , I will hereafter shew you ; but it remains for you to be convinced , that certain actions and facts are Right or Wrong , ought or ought not to be , from their concordance , or discordance with that voice ...
Seite 43
... proof of what existences do all these things tend ? to this , and nothing else — that the only natural order of things is positively inverted by means direct and indirect : that there is something unnatural , complex , and wrong , at ...
... proof of what existences do all these things tend ? to this , and nothing else — that the only natural order of things is positively inverted by means direct and indirect : that there is something unnatural , complex , and wrong , at ...
Seite 47
... proof , in aid and confirmation of what , from unfrequent occur- rence , might at first be heard with incredulity . If the record is of things in line with those under daily observation , we believe them at once , as effects , though ...
... proof , in aid and confirmation of what , from unfrequent occur- rence , might at first be heard with incredulity . If the record is of things in line with those under daily observation , we believe them at once , as effects , though ...
Seite 48
... proof that belief , which is the assent of fa- culty to any proposition submitted to its ex- amination , is in its very essence absolutely involuntary , wholly independant of effort . If a man says , " I will believe , " without ...
... proof that belief , which is the assent of fa- culty to any proposition submitted to its ex- amination , is in its very essence absolutely involuntary , wholly independant of effort . If a man says , " I will believe , " without ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquired action animal artificial assert Atheist become belief blood cause certainly chimney sweeper civil clothing common conscience consequence Deism Deist dreadful earth emotion endeavour enjoyment enquiry equality equipoise eternity evil existence eyes faculties fancy father fear feeling fool founded free agency fresh genus Gil Blas give hand happiness HARVARD COLLEGE hear heart Holborn human idea ignorance instance intellect knowledge labour laws ledge LETTER listen look luxuries marriage Maurepas mean ment mental middle men mind misery mode nation natural justice natural law Nature necessity never observe once pain Paradise Lost perhaps persons philanthropy pleasure possession present principles proof reason receive revelation sense slavery sort soul sounds speak species surface tell term thee Theocracy things thou thought tion true truth turn unnatural virtue Whigs
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 160 - The man who resolutely divesting himself of habit and prejudice, of the false impressions imbibed from early childhood, resolves to know Truth, if haply she may be found, is sure to be assailed, threatened, mimicked, and insulted, with abuse the most pitiful and inane, with derision the most paltry, stupid, and futile, wholly unworthy of the exaltation to which human attainmentboasts to have arrived. 'His honesty is decried as presumption, his avowal of naked truth as sedition; his exposure of existing...
Seite 162 - Necker,'that reason suits neither you or me: Sully did not go to mass, and Sully was of the council.' ' Maurepas, in this answer, only caught at the ridicule of...