The Citizen of Nature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 17
Page 13
... assertion may be put to the severest 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 ...
... assertion may be put to the severest 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 ...
Page 14
... assertion be warrantable or not ; whether , when the faculties of man are enlightened by the immeasurable brightness of science , by which he learns his real place among the powers of matter and motion , he will or will not , be enabled ...
... assertion be warrantable or not ; whether , when the faculties of man are enlightened by the immeasurable brightness of science , by which he learns his real place among the powers of matter and motion , he will or will not , be enabled ...
Page 29
... assert , that man has no more capability than a brute ; and I pass over the sensations of feeding , procreation , and sleep , which he holds in common with the beasts , assuming them as properties indisputable . And there- fore , on the ...
... assert , that man has no more capability than a brute ; and I pass over the sensations of feeding , procreation , and sleep , which he holds in common with the beasts , assuming them as properties indisputable . And there- fore , on the ...
Page 37
... assert , without assuming the slightest pre- tensions to foreknowledge , that this apparently improbable change will happen from causes purely natural , and of course : it will take place from the very same reasons which caus- ed the ...
... assert , without assuming the slightest pre- tensions to foreknowledge , that this apparently improbable change will happen from causes purely natural , and of course : it will take place from the very same reasons which caus- ed the ...
Page 43
... asserted to exist in absolute purity in this very city ; and of our having seen to - day an exhibition of glaring contrasts , and heard a clash of jarring ex- tremes ; of having witnessed an evident excess of possession in one man , of ...
... asserted to exist in absolute purity in this very city ; and of our having seen to - day an exhibition of glaring contrasts , and heard a clash of jarring ex- tremes ; of having witnessed an evident excess of possession in one man , of ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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
Popular passages
Page 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...
Page 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...