| Samuel Clarke - God - 1823 - 478 pages
...repugnant to the Liberty of Men's Actions ...... 94 Of the Original of Evil - ..... 98 FBOF. XI. That the Supreme Cause and Author of all Things must of necessity be Infinitely Wise ..... 99 Proved a priori - ' - . - - - 100 And a posteriori, from the Wisdom and Perfection... | |
| John Methuen Rogers - Incarnation - 1824 - 120 pages
...consequently, his very being too. For either " He must necessarily be a being (as Dr. Clarke has argued) of infinite goodness, justice, and truth, and all other moral perfections, such as becomes the Supreme Governor and Judge of all the World, or he is not at all." So that the consequences... | |
| George Gleig (bp. of Brechin.) - 1827 - 1124 pages
...in Dr Clarke's footsteps. admit the creation of matter ? Dr Clarke's eleventh proposition — That the supreme Cause and Author of all things must of necessity be infinitely wise, — affirms a truth which follows evidently from those which had been formerly demonstrated.... | |
| Paul Henri Thiry Holbach (baron d') - Materialism - 1834 - 340 pages
...inconsistent views, and then supposing the great cause of causes acts by such futile rules. \2thly, " The supreme Cause and Author of all things, must of...become the supreme governor and judge of the world." We must again repeat, that these are human qualities, drawn from the model of man himself; they only... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - Natural theology - 1835 - 340 pages
...this other proposition, that therefore this being must be infinitely wise (Prop. XL), and that he " must of "necessity be a being of infinite goodness,...become the supreme governor and judge of the world." (Prop. XII.) With the general texture of this argument we have at present nothing to do, further than... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - Natural theology - 1835 - 324 pages
...time, this other proposition, that therefore this being must be infinitely wise (Prop. XL), and that he "must of necessity be a being of infinite goodness,...other moral perfections, such as become the supreme yovernor and judge, of the world." (Prop. XII.) With the general texture of (his argument we have at... | |
| Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - Natural theology - 1835 - 272 pages
...this other proposition, that therefore this being must be infinitely wise (Prop. XI.,) and that he " must of necessity be a being of infinite goodness,...truth, and all other moral perfections, such as become 7 the supreme govemour and judge of the world." (Prop. XII.) With the general texture of this argument... | |
| Thomas Turton - Natural theology - 1836 - 396 pages
...consciousness. After this apparatus, comes the eleventh proposition—adduced by Lord Brougham —That the Supreme Cause and Author of all things must of necessity be infinitely wise. And here, after availing himself of the information afforded by the foregoing propositions—proved... | |
| Religion - 1837 - 1068 pages
...fresh discoveries are made in the domain of nature. We now come to the twelfth and last proposition. " The supreme cause and author of all things must of...the supreme governor and judge of the world." The substance of his proof is as follows. There are certain necessary relations and fitnesses of things,... | |
| Francis Lister Hawks, Caleb Sprague Henry, Joseph Green Cogswell - 1837 - 520 pages
...all lime, this other proposition, that, therefore, this being must be infinitely wise, and that he ' must of necessity be a being of infinite goodness,...become the supreme governor and judge of the world.' With the general texture of this argument we have at present nothing to do, further than to show how... | |
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