The British Quarterly Review, Volume 28Henry Allon Hodder and Stoughton, 1858 - Christianity |
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Page 5
... moral ones . This important inference rests on two distinct arguments . First , that moral truths being stationary , and intellectual truths being progressive , it is highly improbable that the progress of society should be due to moral ...
... moral ones . This important inference rests on two distinct arguments . First , that moral truths being stationary , and intellectual truths being progressive , it is highly improbable that the progress of society should be due to moral ...
Page 6
... moral improvement , but have been , and still are , yielding to intellectual discoveries . From all this it evidently follows that if we wish to ascertain the conditions which regulate the progress of modern civilization , we must seek ...
... moral improvement , but have been , and still are , yielding to intellectual discoveries . From all this it evidently follows that if we wish to ascertain the conditions which regulate the progress of modern civilization , we must seek ...
Page 9
... moral . But it should be remembered , that if men stop from their labour in hot countries in the middle of the day , they commonly rise earlier and seek repose later , as the con- sequence . The main difference accordingly would seem to ...
... moral . But it should be remembered , that if men stop from their labour in hot countries in the middle of the day , they commonly rise earlier and seek repose later , as the con- sequence . The main difference accordingly would seem to ...
Page 16
... moral mysteries of existence into merely natural laws , and then say that is enough . Poor humanity - this is but a ... moral distinctions , a moral law , and a moral Ruler . It is the necessary relation of this truth to all higher truth ...
... moral mysteries of existence into merely natural laws , and then say that is enough . Poor humanity - this is but a ... moral distinctions , a moral law , and a moral Ruler . It is the necessary relation of this truth to all higher truth ...
Page 17
... moral government ! We now come to the next great principle in Mr. Buckle's argument - viz . , that all the progress ... moral feeling , as it has hitherto existed among men , have been so vari- able and contradictory , as to be self ...
... moral government ! We now come to the next great principle in Mr. Buckle's argument - viz . , that all the progress ... moral feeling , as it has hitherto existed among men , have been so vari- able and contradictory , as to be self ...
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