The Connexion of Natural and Divine Truth: Or, The Study of the Inductive Philosophy, Considered as Subservient to TheologyJ.W. Parker, 1838 - 313 sivua |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 84
Sivu iii
... present , abounding with false pretensions on the one hand , and opposing prejudices on the other . Amid such errors and perversions it is a matter of particular satisfaction when the advocates of reason and truth find their efforts ...
... present , abounding with false pretensions on the one hand , and opposing prejudices on the other . Amid such errors and perversions it is a matter of particular satisfaction when the advocates of reason and truth find their efforts ...
Sivu xi
... present , I merely wish to express my conviction of its general value , especially as suggesting rich materials for thought , to every reader capable of turning them to account . I am the more induced 1 to offer this remark , because I ...
... present , I merely wish to express my conviction of its general value , especially as suggesting rich materials for thought , to every reader capable of turning them to account . I am the more induced 1 to offer this remark , because I ...
Sivu xiii
... present publication can have any claims to novelty in its topics . Among the various writers on kindred subjects I have met with none taking precisely the same line , or embracing exactly the same range of subject as that which is ...
... present publication can have any claims to novelty in its topics . Among the various writers on kindred subjects I have met with none taking precisely the same line , or embracing exactly the same range of subject as that which is ...
Sivu xiv
... present work has no pretensions whatever to include a complete or systematic treatise on natural theology . Its outline embraces only certain particular questions connected with that science ; of a nature , indeed , preliminary and ...
... present work has no pretensions whatever to include a complete or systematic treatise on natural theology . Its outline embraces only certain particular questions connected with that science ; of a nature , indeed , preliminary and ...
Sivu 4
... present day , " The study of natural philosophy and natural theology , if rightly pursued , are one ; and true science but a perpetual worship of God in the firmament of his powert . " Now the object of the ensuing discussion is ...
... present day , " The study of natural philosophy and natural theology , if rightly pursued , are one ; and true science but a perpetual worship of God in the firmament of his powert . " Now the object of the ensuing discussion is ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
adopted advance æther analogy animal appear apply argument authority belief Bridgewater Treatise cause and effect conclusions connexion consideration considered contemplation contended cosmogony creation Deity distinct Divine doctrine Dugald Stewart earth entire essential established evidence existence explained extent fact final causes force geologist geology globe ground idea Idola theatri imagined inductive inductive philosophy inductive reasoning inference instance intelligence invariable investigation kind limited manifest material meaning merely mind moral causation natural philosophy natural theology Newton nexion notion object observe orbits organized particular perceive perhaps periods phenomena philosophical physical causes physical inquiry physical laws physical science physical truth physiologist planet precise present principle proof question rational reasoning recognised referred relation religion religious remarks revelation Scripture sense sical species speculations succession term theory things tical tion trace Tycho Brahe uniformity universal vast whole writers
Suositut otteet
Sivu 170 - But if the matter was evenly disposed throughout an infinite space, it could never convene into one mass, but some of it would convene into one mass, and some into another, so as to make an infinite number of great masses, scattered at great distances from one to another throughout all that infinite space.
Sivu 170 - ... an opaque body like the planets or the planets lucid bodies like the sun, how he alone should be changed into a shining body whilst all they continue opaque, or all they be changed into opaque ones whilst he remains unchanged, I do not think explicable by mere natural causes, but am forced to ascribe it to the counsel and contrivance of a voluntary Agent.
Sivu 299 - And hardly do we guess aright at things that are upon earth, and with labour do we find the things that are before us: but the things that are in heaven who hath searched out?
Sivu 313 - ... newness, to interest with a perpetual charm the growing mind of a rational being, and lead him by a flowery path t o the cultivation of the divine thing within him, which raises him above all that his senses make known; and thus to fit him for the highest contemplation of which he is capable, namely, the relation which he bears to the unseen AUTHOR of all this visible material world.
Sivu 81 - Effect" — a work of great acuteness and subtlety of reasoning on some points, but in which the whole train of argument is vitiated by one enormous oversight ; the omission, namely, of a distinct and immediate personal consciousness of causation in his enumeration of that sequence of events, by which the volition of the mind is made to terminate in the motion of material objects.
Sivu 73 - The laws of attraction and repulsion are to be regarded as laws of motion, and these only as rules or methods observed in the productions of natural effects, the efficient and final causes whereof are not of mechanical consideration. Certainly, if the explaining a phenomenon be to assign its proper efficient and final cause,* it should seem the mechanical philosophers never explained any thing ; their province being only to discover the laws of nature, that is, the general rules and methods of motion,...
Sivu 287 - Nothing can more evince his distaste or his inferior capacity for metaphysical researches. He assumes the very position which alone sceptics dispute. In combating him they would assert that he begged the whole question ; for certainly they do not deny, at least in modern times, the fact of adaptation. As to the fundamental doctrine of causation, not the least allusion is ever made to it in any of his writings, even in his Moral Philosophy.
Sivu 260 - The only alternative is to admit that it was not intended for an HISTORICAL narrative; and if the representation cannot have been designed for literal history, it only remains to regard it as having been intended for the better enforcement of its objects in the language of...