Brownson's Quarterly ReviewBenjamin H. Greene, 1965 |
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... effect , is , that they all beg the question , or take for granted what requires to be proved . They all assume that the soul and cosmos are effects . Grant them to be effects , it follows necessarily that they have had a cause , and a ...
... effect , is , that they all beg the question , or take for granted what requires to be proved . They all assume that the soul and cosmos are effects . Grant them to be effects , it follows necessarily that they have had a cause , and a ...
Página 141
... effect , which caused them to lose sight of the real distinction between Creator and creature , or God and nature . Certain it is that the cause must be immanent in the effect , or the effect would cease to exist . But the cause may be ...
... effect , which caused them to lose sight of the real distinction between Creator and creature , or God and nature . Certain it is that the cause must be immanent in the effect , or the effect would cease to exist . But the cause may be ...
Página 485
... effect . But sensible experience gives us what we are accustomed to call cause and effect only under the relation of time , the one as preceding and the other as following , never as neces- sarily connected . It merely informs us that ...
... effect . But sensible experience gives us what we are accustomed to call cause and effect only under the relation of time , the one as preceding and the other as following , never as neces- sarily connected . It merely informs us that ...
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absolute American Archbishop assert atheism authority baptism baptized believe bishop body Burns & Oates called catechumens Catholic Catholic Church Catholic World Christ Christian civil conditional baptism constitution contingent created creative act creatures deny depends Descartes devotion distinction Divine doctrine dogma doubt empirical error existence fact faith Father Gallican grace Hence heresy hold Holy human idea independent infallible infidelity innate idea intellect intelligible invincibly ignorant Jesuits Jesus judgment liberty logical Lord means mind moral nations nature never object pagan pantheism party persons philosophy political Pope present priest principles Protestant Protestantism prove question real and necessary reality reason relation religion REVIEW Sacrament salvation saved schools secular sense sensible simply Sir William Hamilton society Society of Jesus soul sovereign spiritual substance supernatural suppose teach teleological theologians theology things Thomas thought tion Transubstantiation true truth Ultramontanes universal word writings