| William Paley - 1810 - 436 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences, from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must ne^ cessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared... | |
| William Paley - 1824 - 426 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences^ from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared to... | |
| Thomas Hartwell Horne - 1825 - 682 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation."1 These coincidences are... | |
| William Paley - 1825 - 454 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences, from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared to... | |
| Thomas Hartwell Horne - 1825 - 684 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation."1 These coincidences are... | |
| William Paley - 1828 - 610 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences, from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared to... | |
| John Brewster - 1830 - 602 Seiten
...the history was taken from the letters, nor the letters from the history. Coincidences, therefore, which are too close and numerous to be accounted for...fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation V 1 Paley's View, &c. vol. ii. p. 1 95. The reader is particularly referred to that author's Horse... | |
| William Carpenter - 1830 - 342 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental occurrences, or fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared to the mind of... | |
| William Paley - 1830 - 378 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences, from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation. This argument appeared to... | |
| Thomas Hartwell Horne - 1836 - 480 Seiten
...meditation, or by any fraudulent contrivance. But coincidences from which these causes are excluded, and which are too close and numerous to be accounted for by accidental concurrences of fiction, must necessarily have truth for their foundation."20 These coincidences are... | |
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