Part, §
1 Text, II | be; and to depreciate the Science they profess, by demonstrating
2 Text, III | do without them even in Science? ~
3 Text, VI | them on the Foot of Humane Science, even though Religion were
4 Text, VI | upon their Pretensions to Science: And hence you take Occasion
5 Text, VII | light and evidence of their science gains credit to their Infidelity. ~
6 Text, VIII | sincere endeavour to free a science, so useful and ornamental
7 Text, IX | the confuting an errour in Science to burning or hanging the
8 Text, XI | no right to erect one in Science. At the time of writing
9 Text, XII | XII. In a matter of mere Science, where authority hath nothing
10 Text, XV | the Principles of human Science, who think it no honour
11 Text, XVIII | judge of this, no depth of Science is requisite, but only a
12 Text, XIX | studying the principles of any Science, may be supposed to walk
13 Text, XXI | Men learn the elements of Science from others: And every learner
14 Text, XXIV | accuracy of the reasoning in science. That this was really the
15 Text, XXXIV | The former in a matter of science are of no weight with indifferent
16 Text, XXXVIII| he arrives though not at science yet at Truth: that he proceeds
17 Text, XLV | Geometry nor any other general Science can subsist without general
18 Text, L | wherein so many pretenders to science attack the Christian Religion,
19 Text, L | intelligible principles in any science should be discountenanced?
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