Results of ReadingJ. Murray, 1843 - 351 Seiten |
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Seite 1
... things show themselves to have proceeded from the wis- dom , power , and goodness of One - whence that One is eternal ; and so all nations have concluded that God is.3 To believe a God is to believe the existence of all possible good ...
... things show themselves to have proceeded from the wis- dom , power , and goodness of One - whence that One is eternal ; and so all nations have concluded that God is.3 To believe a God is to believe the existence of all possible good ...
Seite 2
... things as eye hath not seen nor ear heard , nor can now enter into the heart of man to conceive.1 The visible marks ... thing our senses have 1 Cudworth . 2 Locke . 3 Locke . 4 Locke . 5 Locke . 6 Essays on the Principles of Morality and ...
... things as eye hath not seen nor ear heard , nor can now enter into the heart of man to conceive.1 The visible marks ... thing our senses have 1 Cudworth . 2 Locke . 3 Locke . 4 Locke . 5 Locke . 6 Essays on the Principles of Morality and ...
Seite 3
... thing else without us.1 The Deity has not left his existence to be gathered from slippery and far - fetched arguments . We have but to open our eyes to receive impressions of him , almost from every thing we perceive . We discover his ...
... thing else without us.1 The Deity has not left his existence to be gathered from slippery and far - fetched arguments . We have but to open our eyes to receive impressions of him , almost from every thing we perceive . We discover his ...
Seite 5
... thing : or that those things which , with the utmost stretch of his reason , he can scarce comprehend , should be moved and managed without any reason at all . " 99 1 The more a man is versed in business , the more he finds the hand of ...
... thing : or that those things which , with the utmost stretch of his reason , he can scarce comprehend , should be moved and managed without any reason at all . " 99 1 The more a man is versed in business , the more he finds the hand of ...
Seite 6
... things beside . Plato refers the making of the world to one whom he calls the Father and Maker of the universe . Aristotle doth speak usually of God in the singular ; and the Stoics , in their famous pre- cept , to " follow God " —that ...
... things beside . Plato refers the making of the world to one whom he calls the Father and Maker of the universe . Aristotle doth speak usually of God in the singular ; and the Stoics , in their famous pre- cept , to " follow God " —that ...
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