The natural history of superstition .. . enfe the Phrafe of denyingTruth by Adion or Omiffion feems capableof, explained above, which yet makes hisDodrine at firft Sight appear fo very grofs,that I fear he ufed that Expreflion withoutany clear determinate Meaning at all. I have now done with Mr. Wollafton, whomI own to have been a very ingenious Man,and capable enough of writing very finelyupon the Subjed, had he not been mifledby the unhappy Miftake I have been all thiswhile confuting. I did propofe indeedwhen I firft took up the Defign of examin-ing him, to have prcmifed a Differtation upon
The natural history of superstition .. . enfe the Phrafe of denyingTruth by Adion or Omiffion feems capableof, explained above, which yet makes hisDodrine at firft Sight appear fo very grofs,that I fear he ufed that Expreflion withoutany clear determinate Meaning at all. I have now done with Mr. Wollafton, whomI own to have been a very ingenious Man,and capable enough of writing very finelyupon the Subjed, had he not been mifledby the unhappy Miftake I have been all thiswhile confuting. I did propofe indeedwhen I firft took up the Defign of examin-ing him, to have prcmifed a Differtation upon ( ^3 )upon the Foundation of Morality, In orderto ered a new Building of my own at thefame time I demolifhed his 5 but finding thatWork was likely to run out to a greaterLength than I at firft imagined, I havechofen to publifh this Examination of by itfelf: If it makes its way inthe World to my liking, the other intendedPart may perhaps follow after, as faft as thecumberfom Employment I have upon myHand§ will allow. BOOKS Printed for Arthur Bet-TESWORTH at the Red Lion inPater-nofter-row. AN Introdudion to the making of La-tin i comprifmg, after an eafy com-pendious Method, the Subftance of the La-tin Syntax. With proper Englifli Examples,moft of them Tranflations from the ClafficAuthors in one Column, and the LatinWords in another. To which is fubjoinedin the fame Method, A Succinft Accountof the Affairs of antient Greece and Romeyintended at once to bring Boys acquaintedwith Hiftory and the Idiom of the LatinTongue. The Fourtli Edition. Trice i s. Cornelius Nepos. Trice 3 s. 6 d. Eutropius. Trice 2 s, 6 d. Erafmus. Trice 1 s. 6 d. Corderius. Trice i with Ehglifh Tranflations- as literal as pojjible An EiTay upon the Education of Youthia Grammar Schools. Trice ftitcht i s, Thefe fix by John Clark, Mafter of thepublick Grammar School in HulL THE / Principal and Peculiar NOTION Advancd in a Late BOOK. I N T I T L E D, Tbe Religion of Nature Deli
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