The New-York Review, and Atheneum Magazine, Volumes 1-2E. Bliss & E. White, 1825 |
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Page 15
... reason . The necessity of caution in adopting the opinions of others in those departments of knowledge , which give a scope to specula- tion , becomes the more apparent , when we reflect that the best of modern historical compositions ...
... reason . The necessity of caution in adopting the opinions of others in those departments of knowledge , which give a scope to specula- tion , becomes the more apparent , when we reflect that the best of modern historical compositions ...
Page 26
... reason to believe , so long as our national character and institutions are unchanged , that in our future wars , as in those through which we have passed , we shall always be able to justify ourselves in the language used by Caius ...
... reason to believe , so long as our national character and institutions are unchanged , that in our future wars , as in those through which we have passed , we shall always be able to justify ourselves in the language used by Caius ...
Page 30
... reason to judge of the internal evidence of truth in the doctrines and precepts of religion . " Dr. Chalmers has certainly expressed himself in language too unmeasured , when combating the presumption which would seat itself in the ...
... reason to judge of the internal evidence of truth in the doctrines and precepts of religion . " Dr. Chalmers has certainly expressed himself in language too unmeasured , when combating the presumption which would seat itself in the ...
Page 31
... reason , they must then be considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into ...
... reason , they must then be considered as something nobler and more divine than reason itself . They may lie dormant , in the darkness of ignorance , or the corruption of gross vice ; but , when the occasion which is to call them into ...
Page 32
... reason , or by the observation of miracu- lous facts visible to the senses , or in the ordinary operation or moral il- lumination through the conscience and affections , but in a manner not only supernatural but wholly peculiar ; whose ...
... reason , or by the observation of miracu- lous facts visible to the senses , or in the ordinary operation or moral il- lumination through the conscience and affections , but in a manner not only supernatural but wholly peculiar ; whose ...
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