| Isaac Watts - 1807 - 320 pages
....{is it were) wrought into the very nature and make of our mind : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof, k is the prerogative and peculiar excellence of these propositions, that they can scarce ever be protftd... | |
| Isaac Watts - Conduct of life - 1809 - 328 pages
...selievidence in any proposition is called intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : They are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
| Isaac Watts - Dissenters, Religious - 1813 - 616 pages
...self-evidence in any proposition is called intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
| Thomas Hancock - Instinct - 1824 - 578 pages
...as it were, wrought into the -eery nature and make of our minds ; they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no...proof. It is the prerogative and peculiar excellence of these propositions, that they can scarce ever be proved or denied." — " These propositions are called... | |
| Thomas Hancock - Instinct - 1824 - 584 pages
...self-evidence in any proposition, is called Intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth, which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds ,they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1854 - 428 pages
...self-evidence in any proposition is called intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1857 - 416 pages
...as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no...proof. It is the prerogative and peculiar excellence of these propositions, that they can scarce ever be proved or denied : they cannot easily be proved, because... | |
| James William Gilbart - Language and languages - 1857 - 416 pages
...self-evidence in any proposition is called intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
| James William Gilbart - Logic - 1857 - 414 pages
...self-evidence in any proposition is called intelligence. It is our knowledge of those first principles of truth which are, as it were, wrought into the very nature and make of our minds : they are so evident in themselves to every man who attends to them, that they need no proof. It is the prerogative... | |
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