... that is, let him, with a pious confidence, seek for benevolent purposes, and he will be always directed to the right road, and after a due continuance in it, attain to some new and valuable truth ; whereas, every other principle and motive of examination... Observations on Man, His Frame, His Duty, and His Expectations - Strana 246autor/autoři: David Hartley - 1801Úplné zobrazení - Podrobnosti o knize
| David Hartley - 1810 - 554 str.
...enquirer take it for granted previoufly, that every thing is right, and the beft that it can be, cateris manentibus; ie let him, with a pious confidence, feek...only things which can give a genuine and permanent luflre to the truths that are difcovered. A man with the moft perfect comprehenfion that his faculties... | |
| Joseph Priestley - 1780 - 494 str.
...and he will be always directed to the right road, and after a due continuance in it, attain to some new and valuable truth ; whereas, every other principle...motive of examination being foreign to the great plan on which the universe is constructed, must lead into endless mazes, errors, and perplexities."* With... | |
| David Hartley - 1834 - 646 str.
...and he will be always directed to the right road, and, after a due continuance in it, attain to some new and valuable truth ; whereas every other principle...examination, being foreign to the great plan upon which the universe is constructed, must lead into endless mazes, errors, and perplexities. Thirdly, It may be... | |
| Joseph Priestley, Henry Ware - 1834 - 300 str.
...and he will be always directed to the right road ; and after a due continuance in it, attain to some new and valuable truth : whereas every other principle...motive of examination, being foreign to the great plan on which the universe is constructed, must lead into endless mazes, errors, and perplexities. Extract... | |
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