The analogy of religion, natural and revealed . Neo-Platonist philosopher,who lived about 303 St. Jerome, in his commentary onDaniel, quotes Porphyrys views: he places the two last beastsin the single Macedonian kingdom; and, he enumerates tenkings who were very cruel: and these kings he does not place eachin one kingdom,—say Macedonia, Syria, Asia, and Egypt: butusing different kingdoms he makes one order of kings. Page 260 : note 2. Butler is here alluding to Collinss arguments founded in partupon Dodwells eccentric opinion that the soul is mortal untilbaptized (see p. 9). Page 265. Nei


The analogy of religion, natural and revealed . Neo-Platonist philosopher,who lived about 303 St. Jerome, in his commentary onDaniel, quotes Porphyrys views: he places the two last beastsin the single Macedonian kingdom; and, he enumerates tenkings who were very cruel: and these kings he does not place eachin one kingdom,—say Macedonia, Syria, Asia, and Egypt: butusing different kingdoms he makes one order of kings. Page 260 : note 2. Butler is here alluding to Collinss arguments founded in partupon Dodwells eccentric opinion that the soul is mortal untilbaptized (see p. 9). Page 265. Neither virtue nor vice is a quiescence, but an activity. All the praise we give to virtue we give to it as an activity. Page 271. The authors of great and distinguished merit are the groupknown as the Cambridge Platonists,—Cudworth, More, Smith,and Frances Hutcheson. They made virtue consist so entirely inbenevolence that they recognized no self-regarding virtues, such asprudence. ^lymouth: w. brendon and son, ltd., printers ^^<b Date Due. ^^ V Si-i^«^;^i^iferaqi Princeton Theological Seminary-Speer Library 1 1012 01006 9716 f


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