Part, §
1 Text, I | your Defence of the British Mathematicians, I could not Sir, but admire
2 Text, I | and candid Men among the Mathematicians. And for those who are not
3 Text, I | And for those who are not Mathematicians, I shall endeavour so to
4 Text, V | V. I do not say, that Mathematicians, as such, are Infidels;
5 Text, V | I say there are certain Mathematicians, who are known to be so;
6 Text, V | are others, who are not Mathematicians, who are influenced by a
7 Text, VI | make no doubt, among the Mathematicians many sincere Believers in
8 Text, IX | Mathematical Infidels to all Mathematicians, or the confuting an errour
9 Text, IX | burn or hang up all the Mathematicians in Great Britain, or halloo
10 Text, XX | deference to the best of Mathematicians, who are no more qualified
11 Text, XXI | points tacitly admitted by Mathematicians, which are neither evident
12 Text, XXV | practice, and represent Mathematicians as proceeding blindfold
13 Text, XXXVIII| of all the most profound Mathematicians, whether they can, with
14 Text, XLIII | self freely conversed with Mathematicians of all ranks, and some of
15 Text, XLIV | I call on the celebrated Mathematicians of the present Age to clear
16 Text, XLV | your defence of the British Mathematicians, I find in the next place,
17 Text, L | mechanical Philosophers, Mathematicians, and Philomathematicians
18 Text, L | ought to be ill received by Mathematicians? Whether the introducing
19 App, II | Infidelity to be imputed to Mathematicians in general, which I suppose
20 App, IV | treating Mathematics and Mathematicians (P. 5), may (as well as
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