Chap.

 1    1|           that give a substance to morality. My opinion, indeed, respecting
 2    1|       which are very early caught, morality becomes an empty name. The
 3    1|        character was subversive of morality, and I have contended, that
 4    1|         front, will ever undermine morality.~ ~ I have repeatedly asserted,
 5    1|             is highly injurious to morality.~ ~ A standing army, for
 6    1|       notions of honour, a kind of morality founded on the fashion of
 7    2|            language of reason, the morality of life; and who but a fool
 8    2|          of human nature.~ ~ Noble morality! and consistent with the
 9    2|           at every step; but, when morality shall be settled on a more
10    2|          but one rule of right, if morality has an eternal foundation,
11    3|            to form an experimental morality, and to reduce the study
12    3|          only solid foundation for morality appears to be the character
13    4|          knowledge there can be no morality!~ ~ Ignorance is a frail
14    5|           sort be termed a virtue, morality becomes vague when any part
15    5|           warfare, that undermines morality, and divides mankind!~ ~
16    5|            please other men. Noble morality! But thus is the understanding
17    5|        what ground can religion or morality rest when justice is thus
18    5|            worldly wisdom with her morality, that I should not let a
19    5|          the impulse of the heart, morality is made to rest on a rock
20    7|           deplore as subversive of morality, arises from the state of
21    8|                      Chap. VIII.~ ~Morality Undermined by Sexual Notions
22    8|           poisons, that incrusting morality eat away the substance.
23    8|           ceremonials of duty, but morality offers much simpler motives;
24    8|    Speaking of the general laws of morality, Dr. Smith observes, - '
25    8|      comment; but I am afraid that morality is very insidiously undermined,
26    8|         are equally destructive to morality.~ ~ Men are certainly more
27    8|        unsupported by that sublime morality which makes the habitual
28    9|    religion is also separated from morality by a ceremonial veil, yet
29    9|         established in society, or morality will never gain ground,
30    9| disgraceful than even vice, is not morality cut to the quick? Still
31   11|           perhaps, as injurious to morality as those religious systems
32   11|      foundation of the first duty, morality will stumble at the threshold.
33   12|      extremes equally injurious to morality, would be to contrive some
34   12|          These would be schools of morality - and the happiness of man,
35   12|          forgetting the science of morality, or the study of the political
36   12|           rights of humanity. Thus morality, polluted in the national
37   12|     sublime contentment which only morality can diffuse.~ ~
38   13|           universally injurious to morality than all the other vices
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