The Philosophical Works of the Late Right Honorable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke, 2. kötetDavid Mallet, 1754 |
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1. oldal
... proved , without the help of the Old Testament , nor very well with it , as I have hinted above , that the unity of God was the pri- mitive belief of mankind : neither does it appear to my apprehenfion that in fact it could be fo ...
... proved , without the help of the Old Testament , nor very well with it , as I have hinted above , that the unity of God was the pri- mitive belief of mankind : neither does it appear to my apprehenfion that in fact it could be fo ...
5. oldal
... prove at most that some men have , and that no other spe- cies of animals has in general , nor in particular inftances , the faculty we call reafon in fuch a de- gree , as to render them capable of discovering the existence of the ...
... prove at most that some men have , and that no other spe- cies of animals has in general , nor in particular inftances , the faculty we call reafon in fuch a de- gree , as to render them capable of discovering the existence of the ...
18. oldal
... proved itself to be a very rank foil and immenfe crops of error fprung up from it , of error more ingenious and more plau- fible than the fuperftitious opinions of favage nations , but yet as real . Tho ' the belief of many inferior ...
... proved itself to be a very rank foil and immenfe crops of error fprung up from it , of error more ingenious and more plau- fible than the fuperftitious opinions of favage nations , but yet as real . Tho ' the belief of many inferior ...
32. oldal
... prove nothing , or might be turned to prove what the learned author would have disliked very much , to prove it ill perhaps , but as well at least as they prove his fuggeftion . The other proof he brings may be equivocal as well as weak ...
... prove nothing , or might be turned to prove what the learned author would have disliked very much , to prove it ill perhaps , but as well at least as they prove his fuggeftion . The other proof he brings may be equivocal as well as weak ...
34. oldal
... proved already . He had shewn how poets and philofophers promoted polytheism by allegorifing corporeal nature . Was it hard then to imagine that they allegorifed incorporeal na- , ture likewise ? They deified fenfible , why should they ...
... proved already . He had shewn how poets and philofophers promoted polytheism by allegorifing corporeal nature . Was it hard then to imagine that they allegorifed incorporeal na- , ture likewise ? They deified fenfible , why should they ...
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abfurd abſtract affert affumed againſt ANAXAGORAS ancient anſwer apoſtles ARCESILAUS ARISTOTLE authority becauſe believe cafe CARNEADES caufe cauſe CHRIST Chriſtianity church defign difpute DIOGENES LAERTIUS diſcover divine doctrines Egyptian eſtabliſhed EUSEBIUS exerciſe exiſtence faid fame fathers fecond fect feems fenfe ferve feveral fhew fhould figns fince firft firſt fome foon foul fpirits ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuperftition fuppofe fure fyftem gofpel greateſt heathen himſelf hiſtory human hypothefis ideas idolatry inftance inftituted inſtead itſelf Jews knowledge laft leaſt lefs leſs mankind metaphyfical mind moft moſt muſt myſtery natural theology nature neceffary notions obferved occafion opinions paffages paffed perfons philofophers phyfics PLATO PLUTARCH polytheiſm preferved pretended principles purpoſe PYTHAGORAS raiſed reaſon refpect religion revelation ſay ſchools ſcience ſeem SOCRATES ſpeak ſtate ſtill ſuch ſuppoſed Supreme ſyſtem taught thefe themſelves theology theſe things thofe thoſe tion true truth underſtand univerfal uſe whilft whofe wiſdom worſhip
Népszerű szakaszok
162. oldal - Then Paul stood in the midst of Mars' hill, and said, Ye men of Athens, I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious. For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.
353. oldal - But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ ; and the head of the woman is the man ; nnd the head of Christ is God.
307. oldal - But I fay unto you, That whofoever looketh on a woman to luft after her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart.
25. oldal - In like manner, the knowledge of the Creator is on many accounts necessary to such a creature as man: and therefore we are made able to arrive, by a proper exercise of our mental faculties, from a knowledge of God's works to a knowledge of his existence, and of that infinite power and wisdom which are demonstrated to us in them. Our knowledge concerning God goes no further.
160. oldal - Hence we see that reason, speaking never so clearly to the wise and virtuous, had never authority enough to prevail on the multitude, and to persuade the societies of men that there was but one God that alone was to be owned and worshipped.
224. oldal - Our physical and moral systems are carried round in one perpetual revolution, from generation to corruption, and from corruption to generation; from ignorance to knowledge, and from knowledge to ignorance; from barbarity to civility, and from civility to barbarity.
282. oldal - ... the most unfeigned thanksgiving. Reason has exercised her whole prerogative then, and delivers us over to faith. To believe before all these trials, or to doubt after them, is alike unreasonable; for nothing can be more absurd and contemptible, than what St.
328. oldal - But still the charge they bring will be unjustly brought. These effects have not been caused by the gospel, but by the system raised upon it. Not by the revelations of God, but by the inventions of men.
319. oldal - In short, he carried his indulgence so far, or he dissembled so far, that he became as a Jew to the Jews, that he might gain the Jews, and to them that are without law, that is, to the Gentiles, as without law, that he might gain them too.t We have his own word for this, and he boasts of it.