| Richard Bentley - 1693 - 304 páginas
...Conception of our own Minds, and only a Compendious way of (peaking, whereby we would exprefs, That fuch Effects, as are commonly attributed to Chance,...Event called Cafual, if you take away the real and phyOcal Caufes, there remains nothing, but a fimple Negation of the Agents intending fuch an Event... | |
| Richard Bentley - 1809 - 450 páginas
...conception of our own minds, and only a compendious way of fpeaking, whereby we would exprefs, that fuch effects as are commonly attributed to chance...real and phyfical caufes, there remains nothing but a fimple negation of the agents intending fuch an event: which negation being no real entity, but a conception... | |
| 1816 - 844 páginas
...; a conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of fpeaking, whereby we would cxprefs, that fuch effects as are commonly attributed to chance,...by their true and proper caufes, but without their defign to produce them. Eentlty. a. Fortune ; the aft of fortune ; what fortune may bring : applied... | |
| Encyclopaedia Perthensis - 1816 - 862 páginas
...conetption of our minds, and only a compendious wiyof ipeaking, whereby we would exprefs, that fjch effects as are commonly attributed to chance, were verily produced by their true and proper ( nues, but without their delign to produce them. Bally. ». Fortune; the aft of fortune; what fortune... | |
| Richard Bentley - 1838 - 580 páginas
...conception of our own minds, and only a compendious way of speaking, whereby we would express, that such effects as are commonly attributed to chance were verily produced by their true and proper causes, but without their designing to produce them. And in any event called casual, if you take away... | |
| William Cowper - 1856 - 464 páginas
...conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of speaking, whereby we would express that auch effects as are commonly attributed to chance were verily produced by their true and proper causea, but without their design to produce them." — Bentley. Thy Providence forbids that fickle... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1858 - 694 páginas
...conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of speaking whereby we would express that such effects as are commonly attributed to chance were verily produced by their true and proper causes, but without their design to produce them.' Supernatural interference, then, being left to stand... | |
| 1858 - 424 páginas
...conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of speaking, whereby we would express, that such effects as are commonly attributed to chance, were verily produced by their true and proper causes, but without their design to produce them. THE FLUTE OF LACED^MON. BY REV. EDWARD C. JONES.... | |
| Samuel Austin Allibone - 1876 - 768 páginas
...conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of speaking, whereby we would express that such effects as are commonly attributed to chance were verily produced by their true and proper causes, but without their design to produce them. BENTLEY. It is strictly and philosophically true... | |
| William Walker Atkinson - 1909 - 366 páginas
...conception of our minds, and only a compendious way of speaking, whereby we would express, that such effects as are commonly attributed to chance, were verily produced by their true and proper causes." The highest modern philosophical thought agrees with the Arcane Teaching that : "In the Cosmos... | |
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