The Folly and Unreasonableness of Atheism ...: In Eight Sermons Preached at the Lecture Founded by the Honourable Robert Boyle, Esquire; in the First Year MDCXCII.J.H., 1693 - Atheism |
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Page 23
... Frame and Con- ftitution of Man . How then can the Atheist reflect on his own Hypothefis without extreme forrow and dejection of Spirit ? Will he fay , that when once he is dead , this Defire will be nothing ; and that he that is not ...
... Frame and Con- ftitution of Man . How then can the Atheist reflect on his own Hypothefis without extreme forrow and dejection of Spirit ? Will he fay , that when once he is dead , this Defire will be nothing ; and that he that is not ...
Page 4
... Frame of the World not to the Power of God , but the fortuitous concourse of Atoms ; and to the Peripatetics , that supposed all things to have been eternally , as they now are , and never to have been made at all , either by the Deity ...
... Frame of the World not to the Power of God , but the fortuitous concourse of Atoms ; and to the Peripatetics , that supposed all things to have been eternally , as they now are , and never to have been made at all , either by the Deity ...
Page 15
... frame in our minds any notion of Matter , we conceive nothing else but Extenfion and Buik ; which is impenetrable and divisible and paffive ; by which three properties is understood , that any particular quantity of Matter doch hinder ...
... frame in our minds any notion of Matter , we conceive nothing else but Extenfion and Buik ; which is impenetrable and divisible and paffive ; by which three properties is understood , that any particular quantity of Matter doch hinder ...
Page 18
... Frame and Make , that must receive these impreffious . Will they say that these Idea's are performed by the Brain ? But the difficulty returns upon them again : for we perceive that the like qualities of foftness , whiteness . and ...
... Frame and Make , that must receive these impreffious . Will they say that these Idea's are performed by the Brain ? But the difficulty returns upon them again : for we perceive that the like qualities of foftness , whiteness . and ...
Page
... Frame , which we now see it carry . But this will be the Argument of my next Discourse , which is the fecond Propofition drawn from the Text , That the Admirable Structure of Human Bo- dies , whereby they are fitted to live and move ...
... Frame , which we now see it carry . But this will be the Argument of my next Discourse , which is the fecond Propofition drawn from the Text , That the Admirable Structure of Human Bo- dies , whereby they are fitted to live and move ...
Common terms and phrases
abfurd Æther affertion affign affirm againſt alfo alſo Animals anſwer Apoſtle Argument Atheiſt Atmoſphere Atoms becauſe believe Bishop of Worcester Bodies Caufe Cauſes Chance Chaos Chriftian confequently confiderable conftitution defign Diſcourſe Diſtance Divine Wiſdom doth Duration Earth effential Epicureans Epicurus eternal Exiſtence faid fame felf felves fhall fhew fhould firft firſt fome formed Frame ftill fuch fuppofe fuppofition fure Gravity hath Heaven himſelf Human Hypothefis impoffible Impulſe infinite laſt leaſt lefs Lucret Mankind Matter Meaſures Mechaniſm moft moſt Motion muft muſt muſt needs Nature neceffarily neceffary neceffity never obferve Orbs paft Particles paſt Perfon Planets Pleaſure Plutarch poffibly pofition Power prefent produced reaſon reft Religion RICHARD BENTLEY ROBERT BOYLE ſay ſeeing ſeems ſelf Senſe ſeveral ſhall ſome Soul ſtill Subftance ſuch ſuppoſed Syftem texture thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand tion tuar Underſtanding Univerfal unleſs uſe whole Wiſdom World
Popular passages
Page 5 - God, Who made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and all things that are therein : Who in times past suffered all nations to walk in their own ways. Nevertheless He left not Himself without witness, in that He did good, and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness.
Page 9 - Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man's device.
Page 1 - If a man should affirm, that an ape, casually meeting with pen, ink, and paper, and falling to scribble, did happen to write exactly the Leviathan of Thomas Hobbes, would an Atheist believe such a story?
Page 3 - THE FOOL hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good.
Page 37 - Because the revolutions of the primary planets about the sun and of the secondary about Jupiter and Saturn are phenomena of the same kind with the revolution of the moon about the earth, and because it has been moreover demonstrated that the centripetal forces of the primary planets are directed towards the centre of the sun and those of the secondary towards the centres of Jupiter and...
Page 2 - But we are not of them that draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe to the saving of the soulq.
Page 31 - Now, mutual gravitation or attraction, in our present acception of the words, is the same thing with this ; 'tis an operation, or virtue, or influence of distant bodies upon each other through an empty interval, without any effluvia, or exhalations, or other corporeal medium to convey and transmit it. This power, therefore, cannot be innate and essential to matter : and if it be not essential, it is consequently most manifest, since* it doth not depend upon motion or rest, or figure or position of...
Page 7 - ... times bigger than the whole body of the earth. If you say, they beget in us a great idea and veneration of the mighty Author and Governor of such stupendous bodies, and excite and elevate our minds to his adoration and praise, you say very truly and well. But would it not raise in us a higher apprehension of the infinite majesty and boundless beneficence of God to suppose that...
Page 8 - For matter hath no life nor perception, is not conscious of its own existence, nor capable of happiness, nor gives the sacrifice of praise and worship to the Author of its being. It remains, therefore, that all bodies were formed for the sake of intelligent minds : and as the earth was principally designed for the being and service and contemplation of men, why may not all other planets be created for the like uses, each for their own inhabitants which have life and understanding...
Page 32 - This would be a new and invincible argument for the being of God ; being a direct and positive proof that an immaterial living mind doth inform and actuate the dead matter, and support the frame of the world.