The Works of Thomas Chalmers, Volume 3R. Carter, 1841 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 81
Page 13
... never does he find her more so than among the recesses of his own internal system , and amid the hidden workings of his own nature . 2. But it is of the utmost practical importance to remark that though man knows not the processes of ...
... never does he find her more so than among the recesses of his own internal system , and amid the hidden workings of his own nature . 2. But it is of the utmost practical importance to remark that though man knows not the processes of ...
Page 14
... never have taken lessons on Physiology , or speculated till he had lost his way among the arcana of vitality and the vital principle . That the machinery of his own internal system may be kept prosperously a - going it is no more ...
... never have taken lessons on Physiology , or speculated till he had lost his way among the arcana of vitality and the vital principle . That the machinery of his own internal system may be kept prosperously a - going it is no more ...
Page 15
... never have heard of a moral sense , and yet both promptly discern and powerfully feel the obligations of morality ... never once have cast an introverted view upon himself the subject , He may have been looking objectively or forth of ...
... never have heard of a moral sense , and yet both promptly discern and powerfully feel the obligations of morality ... never once have cast an introverted view upon himself the subject , He may have been looking objectively or forth of ...
Page 16
... never think of the eye's retina nor be aware of its existence . Notwithstanding his well - condi- tioned moral state he may be as ignorant of the moral , as many a peasant in a well - conditioned phy- sical state is ignorant of the ...
... never think of the eye's retina nor be aware of its existence . Notwithstanding his well - condi- tioned moral state he may be as ignorant of the moral , as many a peasant in a well - conditioned phy- sical state is ignorant of the ...
Page 17
... the objects of reasoning , never once bestow a formal or ex- press thought on the act of reasoning , yet reason conclusively and well - who , busied with nothing else for example but lines and angles and surfaces , OF ITS OWN PROCESSES .
... the objects of reasoning , never once bestow a formal or ex- press thought on the act of reasoning , yet reason conclusively and well - who , busied with nothing else for example but lines and angles and surfaces , OF ITS OWN PROCESSES .
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actual admitted affirm alleged altogether antece antecedent antiquity Apostles apostolic Fathers appearance assertion Atheist authentic authority bability belief Celsus character christian argument christian miracles church circumstances conceive concurrence confidence conviction Corinth credibility deceived Deist diffidence distinct doctrine Dugald Stewart epistle epistle of Clement establish Evangelists event evidence of testimony existence experience fact faith in testimony false falsehood favour feel Gilgal give given gospel history historian historical evidence human Hume imagination impression improbability inductive philosophy infidel inquiry instance instinct instrument investigation Irenæus Jesus Jewish Jews Josephus Judea Julius Cæsar look low-water matter ment mind mony moral narrative never object observation Old Testament original phenomena philosophy Polycarp present principle proof prophecy question reasoning religion revelation Saviour Scripture senses sort of testimony species speculation strength supposition suspicion Tacitus term Testament testi thing thousand tion true truth understanding whole witnesses writers