A treatise on the nature and causes of doubt in religious questions [by D.B. Baker].1831 - Skepticism - 192 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
Page i
... it is proper first should be removed , before you can expect them to apply with any degree of vigour to the study of what seems involved in so much , and such repelling confusion . b " When there is a great deal of smoke and PART.
... it is proper first should be removed , before you can expect them to apply with any degree of vigour to the study of what seems involved in so much , and such repelling confusion . b " When there is a great deal of smoke and PART.
Page v
... it is proper first should be removed , before you can expect them to apply with any degree of vigour to the study of what seems involved in so much , and such repelling confusion . b While the author of this little work craves permission ...
... it is proper first should be removed , before you can expect them to apply with any degree of vigour to the study of what seems involved in so much , and such repelling confusion . b While the author of this little work craves permission ...
Page 1
... viction , which belongs particularly to moral subjects ; and seems to depend on an intuitive B perception of the truth through broken clouds of doubt , MISCONCEPTIONS AS TO THE "NATURE" THE PROOF IN RELIGIOUS QUESTIONS.
... viction , which belongs particularly to moral subjects ; and seems to depend on an intuitive B perception of the truth through broken clouds of doubt , MISCONCEPTIONS AS TO THE "NATURE" THE PROOF IN RELIGIOUS QUESTIONS.
Page 5
... seems to have been reserved for this great man to achieve , in this department of human know- ledge , improvements , scarcely inferior to those of his great contemporary Sir Isaac Newton , in the world of nature . It is only to be re ...
... seems to have been reserved for this great man to achieve , in this department of human know- ledge , improvements , scarcely inferior to those of his great contemporary Sir Isaac Newton , in the world of nature . It is only to be re ...
Page 12
... seems no possible reason to be given , why one may not be in a state of moral probation with regard to the exercise of our faculties upon the subject of religion , as we are with regard to our behaviour on com- mon affairs . And thus ...
... seems no possible reason to be given , why one may not be in a state of moral probation with regard to the exercise of our faculties upon the subject of religion , as we are with regard to our behaviour on com- mon affairs . And thus ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absurd Age of Reason amongst answer Appendix appetites argument assertion assuredly Atheistic Bampton Lectures believe Byron causes Christian Religion concubinage conviction convinced degree of evidence Deism Deist Deity dence desire Diegesis difficulties Discourses divine effects Encyclopędia Britannica error especially Essay expect facts faith favour fear feel foregoing Gibbon habits holy hope Horne's human Hume Hume's important infidel inquiry intellectual Internal Evidence irreligion knowledge learned less Lord LORD BYRON Lord John Russell mankind matter metaphysical mind miracles moral Mosaic Records natural religion never Newton objections obligations observations Olinthus Gregory opinions particular passage peculiar perhaps perplexities persons philosophical prayer probable profession reason reference religious questions remarks revelation ridicule Scriptures seems serious shew Soame Jenyns sophism soul speculations spirit suppose things Thomas Paine thought tions treatise true truth uncon urged various editions whole writers