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" And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena that there is a Being, incorporeal, living, intelligent, omnipresent, who in infinite space, as it were in his sensory, sees the things themselves intimately and thoroughly perceives... "
The Philosophical and Theological Works of ... - Page 255
by John Hutchinson - 1749
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Astronomical Principles of Religion, Natural and Reveal'd: In Nine ..., Volume 2

William Whiston - Bible and science - 1717 - 376 pages
...that Subftance there prelent? And whether from a right Solution of thefe Queries, it does not appear that there is a Being, Incorporeal, Living, Intelligent,...in infinite Space, as it were in his Senfory, fees accurately and intimately, and difcerns throughly the Things themfelves ; and by being prefent to them...
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Opticks:: Or, A Treatise of the Reflections, Refractions, Inflections and ...

Isaac Newton - Optics - 1730 - 432 pages
...perceived by their immediate prefence to that Subftance ? And thefe things being rightly difpatch'd, does it not appear from Phenomena that there is a...Space, as it. were in his Senfory, fees the things themfelves intimately, and throughly perceives them, and comprehends them wholly by their immediate...
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Astronomical Principles of Religion, Natural and Reveal'd: In Nine Parts ...

William Whiston - 1725 - 370 pages
...that Subftance there prelent? And whether from a right Solution of thefe Queries, it does not appear that there is a Being, Incorporeal, Living, Intelligent,...in infinite Space, as it were in his Senfory, fees accurately and intimately, and difcerns throughly the Things themfelves ; and by being prefent to them...
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The Theology and Philosophy in Cicero's Somnium Scipionis, Explained: Or, a ...

George Horne - Religion and science - 1751 - 72 pages
...Take for an example a paraphrafe upon the laft citation, Newt. Opt. $d edit. Lond. 1721. p. 345'. " Does it not appear from phenomena, " that there is a being incorporeal, liv" ing, intelligent, omniprefent, who in " infinite fpace, as it were in his ien" fory, fees the...
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An Enquiry After Philosophy and Theology: Tending to Show when and Whence ...

Robert Spearman - Philosophy - 1755 - 466 pages
..., is taught in fcripture. " And thefe things being rightly " difpatched," fays Sir Ifaac Newton*, " does it not appear, from phenomena, " that there is...living, " intelligent, omniprefent, who in infinite " fpace, as it were in his fenfory, fees *c the things themfelves intimately, and " thoroughly perceives...
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A Short Comment on Sir I. Newton's Principia: Containing Notes Upon Some ...

William Emerson - Celestial mechanics - 1770 - 182 pages
...everliving agent, acting with wifdom and defign. He tells us, that it appears -from the phcenomena, that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent, omniprefent ; who in infinite fpace, as it were in bis fenjory, fees the things themfehes intimately, by their immediate prefence...
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The History of Philosophy, from the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the ...

William Enfield, Johann Jakob Brucker - Philosophy - 1791 - 650 pages
...will. God has no need of organs; he being every where prefent to the things themfelves. It appears from phenomena, that there is a being incorporeal, living, intelligent, omniprefent, who in infinite fpace, as it were in his fenfory, fees the things themfelves intimately, and thoroughly perceives them,...
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Analysis fluxionum

William Hales - Calculus - 1800 - 128 pages
...openbus Natura; causílque finalibus patefacti ?'*. Optics, p. 345. <c Does it not appear from pbanomena that there is a BEING incorporeal, living, intelligent, omniprefent, who in infinite fpace (as it were in bis Senjory] fees the things tbemfelves intimately, and thoroughly perceives them,...
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A Dissertation on the Philosophy of Aristotle: In Four Books ...

Thomas Taylor - Philosophy, Ancient - 1812 - 622 pages
...perceived by their immediate presence to that substance ? And these things being rightly dispatched, does it not appear from phenomena, that there is a being incorporeal, ouffiat » wef i Stav e/*pwro; yvuo-if, *f urcaf rt irainif tefk *f EirTwv HM , Aoyoi/ Tt KM ajroJtiftwf...
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A rationale of the laws of cerebral vision

John Fearn - 1830 - 366 pages
...perceived by their immediate pre" sence to that substance ? And these things be" ing rightly despatched, does it not appear from " phenomena, that there is a Being incorporeal, " living, intelligent, omnipresent, who in infinite " space, as it were in his sensory, sees the things " themselves, intimately...
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