Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
http://books.google.com
THE LIBRARY
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
DAVIS
FBRV'L)
M-Lzz
ULLZPV'
PQIQA .
. , 'PPL) 371'4
'up
P'
'
_
.
.
1
'
'
a'
'
._.
'
'
u'
.
I
'
.\
4
a'
.\
__
.\.
' \
.\'
'
i
,
"
u
_
.
.
'
'
v
'
X
i
1-
-',
v.
'
.
.
\
\
.
.
-
,
u
'
.
,
.
4
.
'
.
,
.
.
.
.
o
.
'
'
A
'i
'
.
.
'
'i
I,
_
.
,
0
.\
.
I
,..
l
l
s
t
.
'
-
\\
.
'
.
I
_I
'.
.
.
\
'
a'
'
.-\
'
'
'
.
L
.
.
,
.
d.*
'
WYX
"
'V
'_
*.!n
.A
,
_.
.
.
.
'a
>
*.
'I
v'
-.- -
_4
\I\ 1N\\\'
\l \
. RTH E
r .
IMMORTALITY
OF,',_F.
~THESOUL
So farreforth as it is dcmom _
rable From the KnoWledge d v
NATURE and the Ligh;
of REA.S "0N..
Ji-vimz
at ' ucuprqma
dium Mundi
qctm victudines
i . ictapo
'Cardanux
LONDQM
Bookellct in Cambridge.
1659.
'
'
a'
'*
'
.
.
l
-
.-
'
'I
.d
a
'
'
'
'
'
\*
'
'dy
H.
'
>
'
'
(A
a
r
'-
r.
'
-.
"
I
-.
,,
,
a
.
"
.
..
'
-.
I
'0'
'
L
.
p
'
.
-
MM.__
uo.
...- >
'Q
0 \
r)
'a
.'*
(,
-l
'
......
i
'I
x')
-..-.
'
'
'
p
'
'
,
e.
'-'
'
,...
p.
\\\.\".\
.\J
'
'Rl
8'
r'
,
'
L'
*\
.-.
-_-
i
'
K'
'A
LJA
Yf'
A.
\
'
n'
__
.\
i
\
_I-'
'
x
':-.,*
' c -*.
'V
"\
-.-\.
..
\
q
->\
-\\*
'\
..
b
\_
_
Jl
2'
(J
'
..>L'k._
"\\'
(-\-
'
'
,a
.
Q'_'*
\.V
'.
_-.'
"
'.
\
.\'
_.>
'
l
'\
0
'
t. a xV
\.
'e
'
\-\
in
z\_'-'
N-
1.
.'
u.
\\
'
'A
'-
'0.
Ns
p'-
'..._
'\I.'<
'
i'-
7'-
\I
x-
'
t'
"
.*\
'
'
.'
'\
'
\,.-.
\\\
s'Ju
'
'I
-\'
.
.
.
.,iq
.
- -
'
"'..
'
'4
1 .
'
-
'
--; m'e
e
'-
'
k"<
-,
'
**\.\.*\\
"-.
's
"
\.
\
M-
_--.-.-._--____'
..-
T'
'
\.
'*'*\
'*
-- ,.
A
'
>
.
r
.- .- 4
'
_x
.
'
l.
.
0
'
-,
..
. 'TO- thc
Honourable. A -
E D- WzA-= R. D
1 _--_L0'tc{ V-icz9ugt__'C ON W;A ctY - _
_
'
A z
' other
may bemmiedchereo,
l could not 3
abain
rimr making, ehiepreencDedication. No: o Much l__ confes to 3
gratify your Lordhip (though it
mine
none ofthe
QWnH-tisction-and
be Gomplements)
comenror
as
l doe not
o great
inmy
thin
as intake
thecnl'ie
andpleaure.
'concience
of H
the Emes 8: urablme omine own' *
actions; ax'mng which I can nde
skill
' YziWhaher-l:
'O'ries in the Following
cenideredDiourcj
all theeLi'I eimian'ces, orany. 0Frthem,...12c0uld V not but. judge them _-_mbrzc-then_ enough
, todeteimine.,-Tm'y choice-to
-.3-_Patroin-*
1 w - a:o i-wotchy'
ctornir i
.r Nor coiild- the abovezilicnt'ncgl
EpWeMitW.
, _
ara'reacbingtherteni &are.For
--asaritriy*art,l ZlrfF,)Ygf_e12aI-"OM('F '
cteWgnhyahdzhlhallanzxAdmer
Mv'ulgar Eidquenedg deattjneithmotie
piegefosany gropdvauwgeTjmulll
evglrzmakefewpgoiow unbu
marriage?
&jnietWtwfH
an
inuiedz it to &e
nioreBBleTPU-Ho'JZF-YWRthC'WMQ
that, xighx-Wlzsthcrtermine-'r by; d
.*
' npurloinedor t
edfrqmout j
'
WhLLhaYeWtiLMYQUdzMWPW .
J dt-"aavourablc ccnczitf Fin- BF, the,
greater obligationBccncOMWmWz:
'i
' '
'
' -yzaitioukmmukciivdervant;
1
Meord
"LA-An- 'in-o.
'
'
as: 2.."
'
.-")'l:.;
'I T'zi-jfl
'
"an
'
.=.><
"
The Preace.
he has abolutely demonrated the Exi
encethetfeof. 3132., That-'the admiion
of that Principle 'need be no hinderance
one' th'
Sling-in,
-Z IihtiMdrmeidml. petnnsa
' Olimrhat
'iankl'e
me . in eit- Lnhe Bqi'ori
-:::ins'0 gChMhte. :m.t5Anmne'0f
otheztlrdixitzuoofzhisi
&ma-his
-neamdlz._ddir:igenifyingahe=pnbliek,
Audthdlrt-therlra oincezt'many rational
(noBemduiSpiri-f 'zo ncizmr Lia-0
Navel,- i': w eno Y}_';;_-t -noljrz-zz.*..<a'*.:,rli
Tu'nlzr
" TT'lMtift 'dye-lid!" mric
mlxepfmh'hkdtginy In q'idtmio'- in
kid' hewcto. ' * bit third] L'izgbghrc
mnzfuyixainirg added
&The.- Pfredde.
'M tWxw-aht
-*
warden-r'
.M'Kmwwn
zf-mzmrmki iekd'a
i'
'r
mue,
maker.w
th'twlheriwnqiw
nimrmw
wit/1 'the * fy) Te
&infinity-5
dllicHxk-'broqghtli
Wddithmtillitzpth
1"
.\ roll-13 ,..3\:**\:n IXI'L'Z i Ir-i'K-n Quit-X
But if 'ieifoifmcr-I mnmywmw
culty the" sir? WdetYfeWWHf
Me
uPqn'<ratiml"gfkiu* =ztltndmizzpnrttizmb
LLib..sz-cap.==M-)=* MTWWFWY *
and fnndziwwiu
-
A\Mew>-=*-vff*li?z
a 2
Prefect.
'be
e H''HPM my 'W
man-'think
Ioggt. Wlzmfm I. a 'cq'n'rr Mm-'Mdjto
pen-e 'ii/24' I lum written, be are they-um
elden -t cmzifl,
In dlcmmn
C'ia
1.'
.
.
r
'x-d
*
l_',M-'J
t r.
"il
my:'it-'king
Reaon 'le
end Pn'lo
** But 7, declined
'be
of t ot'rgommt
'at 'bit '.
time z only' beoiiy float-he dde 'm let!
more
m a.
on:Which
Revelation.
' '*'*toncbi
** .
will be o ed m' pect-'cle
a: [mue a Gem'w to 'be e binde of' Cotton-'
platiom, and wholly widow; dongergj 'bej
ill rcmembrin * 'lb-it i' it 'be mio: of Reaon.
&Nmmhbic being 'n'bjoct to co'pio'
may 'very well be'dcfcctwm or erronmn in
ome
their dictatcr
tbingr)duggfiom,
nd therefore- mber'e
'lever thy
mi"
ch
> wit/1 the Di-v ne Orac or, 'bay mu med: be
'
4' 4
born
_>
Thcirefacw
Laws-Mr. which"
x
Wright
\ noisy-M
tial-t. excoriates-meate'
11, Eat
'
''
SQMW'ZPFFUW
12.: .. -. 'Ki-Myi-Uw"
3 tbatzxh'qgd
He
\ WMLVWWTGd-m&ii-'AN '
ee I,.Aas.>dfetiltedeaad dwmccttzd
let
zexherzmeermzw Pater-Warm;
I OR.
-.-. me Miter-w!err,the(La-Matter?t
'him 1.fakro-tbebeldaiaha
Wwnttdrtcxn'. &se-cedar Riding:
U _ Qi'p1leMs,pmid<C->Mf-..ANill-'i
WNWMW Melt,- za't/acj;
- NNW
'West wewwww-M me
MWrKfe-iwzafaew-Mm wi 'm- are
.33'Zhezrefiee
know-maked)
Mtunob
'my'hteggal_ze_.tbtfeijm'inofrlri?ympudzi
WtiUlCMffribct you'
.
Ham-being Moymdnilypiulem
mtmtbcrk '> Bid/gu timlmyf. arme:
Maker-rien- Mad-w' ' Whoe-its- &1122
fFWEIMJMM-MM judirio'rm TB'WT'. that
ndi- yt-lmzt'inpzmhtxgflyt
>
.hrbn
ofter) it mcty
w 'form
Wtictml-fdwM-xpyaywn bewddd. *--:'* Yf; L'rtrutre 4
Prop'oft'm
mazptioh't cy'beilzg'botb
'*o'- '
down-'Dot-at.
no izowcmaion
int-Euclide'iqmore; clear;- - ixifombirb all-Mdtbomwio'd-ADZ-i
mnmtiom
'It cannot Hutbdwnfed'
wrNefd-nidn' - > t-'beieforegniiiti
'F
Matter-conis
ofvindicerpiblefoirkorzid'fdj
tbot'fbjtwlljwd vziayit kqbdmbk ini- .
in mit-tun; 'bough then pain that wnitofe 'aw
indic'pizridww
FMNLPFFTWZA
W--Q i *i
..""J
\ ,
rThe Preace.
eia
a: ly intelectnay
of whatoever
5', is
it ,'bein
to 'r we
of 'be
part:
very
or ex
The Prefacc;
Pe w'- ,de.-_>
e
'
--
w ;
1:
Me 4" wi,"' *
4. Cen
The Pnzw'i
dijtmrei'mrm fee
W 'Few
he het a wa! in 'thief-if' 'nerj
" e-in 1 'ehY'w'e hehlgtpe'thztgaf-he
Me dwoii? "Offen!3 weld JeezT-yeT'h'A
'ally
the" '
Whem: he
i B ' i
the:aztiemzihhefggringyf 'h'h-'e'idMht'eerz
Make-t he eected: < he: "je"
rent; t-hhtfehere
hay-"uch may' ereal- shepen; 'ad-(hire eye;"
hie vicldme w at I eentend
fit; 'That
Jbe: Prexed.
hall thht*lievh=*hi"i.WhM,
ah*wfrkmkhkzady -'t'nteu_tty'Figterescex$t
w? mshixzewp'ziten thenfrerzg
'mlerzzxz AN TT.
fv *.-. '.-*T';T?*"-_G:)
tip?
itr-jmtvM-Igjhe
Yafrhnvexm WHJJ'N
no. dximztyhic
'oiychn'ct N'M
d white-w'
z hin'=.up>te-
be ma:
xthe>
' '8
W'L'PIWI'PMP
wherein
=*iThc Prcacc.
'herein other: will holdthmfelm: mettenned. But lum', fig/I, that it will tumeed!
- x for
the;
re_'gmerjlly.u
eat that? Thinkin
- ate/ba
ogitacion
'tum
it?inn'
accompanied
mo-ve
, .
The? Ptbace;
<WM it
r.- Far'tho'nv'mldthetwe I
piggit m hym: [making it he:
tgihezlnfmut that 't e fdhtile-Hetm
z'z'ejt'hed or me. 'impre up', 'maid he m
more capable' e 36' itatim-lhl'il 'JWMQKZ
Gold;ate-It' *
And,'hawke-beau
hue _ wife/i (whaez made hat: --'t'4f<_-j't't 'tail
hle Mtheir
(A it.
-u'
.,,
(fluting
ner' H't-x
The?
t set'
He eFvv'fdLWn
Mngehkfhe
Mahghygfhd
nxtiuj wttntd'DhfeiM-z
umwMug-Bzr agn-
JWMWW
weaptihh
'ANgrenwoh
mfe T-IheefMW
0 Fyzm
tum:
Wlymd
eT'WtMtiM-mdwoh
. Win-w'- MlhahMitt-WWMWW e
Wpu w ;*k3._).-.Q*3'T (m Kzr. nd No) Te
J.WWK
ink
' 'i SH
Eqdoatahdiwhe
FNWW'F'W" WWJT'YWWPN
fet
my Mawhewmgwmptm SKYMQUSR
PCdESYMJZIEDMlBS;
wz- M-WW
Wye?
lnj'h'niew '
head Jlfzbi,
Whg ' PWpA ix Fauces txFzz mak JL X ;
LWTVM
MeTWiWYZHZZDeHLWHWYSN
Mm WWK-PMYWWWT HW
. my
me ffzteit-nWuMy-dzznwd
T?
magwttzzhe=idzqhateea etahhzez-Yi
M VMWePhefW/Yng'fh MeW-eftt'dhct
mad'FWhiFt/tihh'-Wjgzeelthf 'PWJ'Y-F
'UOMW
X' int-33r
'me e
The Prefacc..
ma/ee the other part true, That there 12' nothing'
exient in Nature hut what it purely corpo
real.
out of the Prineiple,
former part,
which it _
his ownBut
acknowledged
I haveiund
uch
The Preace; *
tith de no moderate judgment will ever allow
of, end have heeo'ne very ohnoxiout to he
fvyled hy Athei/lieal wits, who are forward
and skilful enough to draw forth the ahurd
a Damon:
in the Mnivere.
I for
i things
i By which
kinde ofreaoning
alo it isA. eay
the Pychopannythites to upport their opi
nion
the Slee
ofthefrom
Soule.
For the
Soule
heingofutterly
rellinded
all that
is cor
o
real, andhavingno vital union therewit at
nd, they will he very prone toitzer, that it 12:
intpofihlehe hould know any t ing :1'd extrzi,
'ifhe'ean o rnuohmr dream. For. even that
..
great
The Preaxc.
' great conequence' it it' ometime; to Tdeert
the opinion of the Sehoolet, when Ftrrtething
t" t
'.\.
aeeurate
The Prcacc.
andfamiliar 'to any that has hut a co'npetency
of Patience and Reaon to perue the The
OryBut
. for my own part, I [hall not a u'me o
much to my hlf, ac peremptorily to a irm that
the Indicerpibility of a s irit arie: that
have eemed
to lurking
many more
ight an unati
fac'lory,
Deceit
in iuni-uerals,
a: the
Proeverh'hac it. And therefore for the more
fully con-uincing ofthe advere party,I thought
fit to pitch upon a punctual decription ofome
one may, how the Soule of Man or of a Dx
The Preace.
poihle at large : (As that mean contrivance
of Na-vigatioh)
And that is all that
aime
at in that place.
iI' I'_was' to.
So in my decription oftheate ofthe .' other
world,I
'very eitollicitous
whether
things
he jutoam
at not
I ha-ve
them down,
hut hecaue
ome men utterly mishelie-ve the thing, he
caue they can frame' no particular conceit
what the Reception: and Entertain: of thoe
Aerial Inhahitants may he, or howthey pa:
pothes, and
The Preacea
entation of to the 'xnderandingsiofmem
z' - 8. * But there arealo particular Ohject'ions.
'The r wher'eoi: again/t our Aerial and
ufthereal El 'ni'ore
7iums,witty,
whicht orooth,
to make *
ey will parallel
their reproach
with the Mihomemn Paradie, But hedet
that] doe in the very place where I treat of
The Preace'.
- nations
he that ohervethow'
our Thought:
ahdJi'cli
depend immediately
on"a cirt'ain'
uhi
tile Matitervin our Bodiec, 'Will n'ot "at al-ick
'to acknowledge to' 'he true? 'i And' therefore
!_
that
ton doe
have
o, lot
_I the
haveene
allotted
of' Concience;
other' punihmentc
'that are more cor _oreal,*an'd little inferiour
'to-theof,reas.ofthethat
'great'ofHell
a prophe
' [led
portion
the that
Devil:
and the
damned at the la Day. \ By which neither
then nor hefore could they he tortured (ifwe
lo_ The
The Prcace.
Io; The two lat Exceptions are, the one
touching the Soul ofthe World,'the other
the Spirit of Nature. The rt icagain/i
our over-favourahle repreentation zf their
"opinion, that make hat one Soul in t e whole
into another
fere
in-thcm, while
If the, former,
through allofthings,
the immediate
rument
Sene' and
and is
Perceptionctz
yet In<
we
are not concious of one anothers-thoughts, nor
feel one anothers pains ,- nor' thepains- and
The Pre'ace.=
Soul, fetive pertiezdzZ'j-pneeptiom t/ycre'ia
"are rerained te ilziwotbztt pert in which
the)
Wide m- Which'
ik'eon'tmry
to theinu'ti
ty -of=are
e-Son'lz
I While'i ' ready aid
it:
dtteplzwe.
,
,
' *
But let Mgnmt the t-bz' ' (far' indeed we
hewe
'demonrated
it" to'mite
&eff-Zut
1ftbere'
be tith
(m uiirzjeral
Soule -and
it) tltenctthe
grand
which part
I but:eft/te
imi
imtingaburdz'ty'
bew, tocomex
wit, irt,Tbatitlmt
Soule - the' world that 'te-ver perceived a
flying', all 'tonj'it/zanding 'remember it,' 'that
if toayz
_-t_}zdt
itmll pierceiged:
perati-ve it bm
perceived
t/Mt
which
"it 'te-ver
And'y'et'me
dtJapan'
me)
remez'nbee
ecpmriemmmi-oeg
for
tbitetj-fljaheadmt
may
years
befbreJNaj,
e'einor
which'tbottgi'ht'
tun/ire to
'be purP07e,*ap uing the Birth 1mo'uc',>'w}jat
Iivrite nongg't e Partly" b'ng'inN't/ze te' "i'n'i , X
ping qfAriejsz'Jb'zz-IZ Pethhhbethf I ' zi'rue
Written wlne'nae is' in the ZejgZmitt '0i Lib'ra;
though tat- Part of the c:ctS'ortile'_*o te'W-'orld
"
Matter
--Thc Prcacfe.
Matter in the World; But Itboygbtz'itniart/L
thewhile ivith all. dt'h'gente-tm cm'tethern:
hoth,
the hetterefth'em
htttuimo're re-z;
ned lei'nde
df Athetme, being
tendictngzto't'hecttth-a
werio'n'of act the 'ftenddrrterztalta ef. Religivn
andI Piety
I. Asfor
among
the SPiric'of
letten, -' Naturezthegreatx
* "._ 3- -'._
*
e excepttans- ere, 'th-nt I hnvejnt'rodnced an
The PrcFacc.
Mechanical olntiont of ome Phznomena
which have heen hitherto oer'd to the
world he demonrahlyfale, yet future Age:
'nay light upon what to true, can he held no
thin eleofhyfearful
the judicione,
hut aare
pittiful
uh
tetfugge
Soule, that
very [oath
to let in any ueh arightil Notion at an
Immaterial or Spiritual Subance into the
world, for fear the next ep mu he the ac
hnowledgrnent alo ofa God z from whom they
would fain hide themelves hy thit poore and
precarious pretence. But I ay, the intro
duction ofthtkl'rinciple he not eaonahle now,
it will never he eaonahle, For that admirahle
Maer of Mechanicks Des-Cartes hao impro
ved thh way to the highelJ dareay, that the
wit of man can reach to inuch Phaenomena
Mhf had attempted to render the caues if.
But how in undry pzyages he fallshort in is
account, I have hot
ex erience,
demon/trated
pofe
of a Stone
or Bulletthatorthe
anydecent
uch up
likei
heavy Body o's enorrnoulZ contrary to the Lawes
of Mechanicks, and t at according to them
The Preacc.
more circumect to di/tiugui/h what is the
reulto the meer Mechanical powers of Mat
tera Motion, and what ofan higher Prin
ciple. For quetionles thisecure preumption
in ome, that there it nothing hut Matter in the
world, had emholdned them too ra/hly to ven
ture on Mechanical olutions where they would
not hold, hecaue they were condent therev
'
alone them
to reach
Eect,
whichdtcovery
necearily
leads
toathe
more
confirmed
of
the Principle we contendfor, namely the Spiz
rit of Nature, which is the vicariotos power
of God upon the Matter, and the ir/I tep to
the aZruej myteries in Natural Theologie .z
.-'lhe- zRrctace.
Cartez' in' all rubb'd? 'Sehools
ubct-x
they
aid! uch,
they to-fall
m;
Which-will
he the-hetwhere
'aitance
Re igion
that Reaon andtlieklenowledge o Nature can
aord." zvFor' hy their means uc iir-areint-en
*
The Prcacc.
for thoe that have hid adieu to hath, and
meaure all Truth: hy their own humouome
fancy, 'na/cing e-very thing ridiculous t at a?
not utahle to their own ignorant conception: z
I thin/t noerious man will hold himelf hound
to ta/ee notice of their per-vere conruction:
ITLHE
s-'a
' ,-.'
.
,...+*:l..l
>
liMMORTA LITY
OFthCSOULE.
C'HAP. I
the uunjderandifng
and lithe'
XJThe
e ulne s o theo?rePCo-vidfnee,
ent S eculation
or
management of our lines for our greateZZ
'
fele \<>
n'
2
The Immartality
'LiB.' 1.'
he becomes able, by unravelling this clue
from end to end, to pas and tepas afe
the
Cap. 1 .
zzi.
'ofthe
Immoztalitieofthiwale
bEi'n'f
6f_\ogrand Importance',
We are-i-enga
edijr'rore
carefully and Punctually' to' hand r this o
-
-_
Bz
weighty
The Immortality
LIB. I.
't'li Mr;
tow'
'
' ' i
J
'
;:.-.'v
W;
1 3.. tv.Nd
to op all
(no
no placefor
itheCreep-holes,
ubteriges and
andleave
eva
._ ons of COniEuEdand' cavlilling pirits, I
. hallJ
aaztzm,
of that'
; prex,- ome;-few
, ' ' '
plainnes
CAP. 2.
ofthe Soule.
5 '
tion thereof.
' '
B3
'Axn'
The Immortality
_LlB.l ..
AXIQME LQ
. s
1 .
'
'
What- ever 'things are in them gloet, they are
'
'
Air-tour, ll.
whatoever is unknown to us , or is known
hut as meet-ly Poih'lenls not to n'o-ve its,
0that thatis meerly pos'ihle is utterly unknown to us to be, and therefore is to have
no
Corn-2.
- otheSoule_
v7
upon
The Immortalzity
Luz. I.
'
maticall
CAP. 2.
ofthe Soule.
AXIOMB V,
Whatever is clear to any one of thee Three
Fnculties, is to'he hela' andouhtedly true," <
'
AXIOME Vl.'\.i.
What is rejected hj one, none ofthe other Fa
cnlties giving evidence for it, ought to got
for afalehood,
7.OR ele aman ma let pas uch Imi
poiibilities as t ee fOr Truth, or
to
The Immortalitj
LlB. I.
A x 1 on B VII.
What is plainly and mortie/il] concluded ,
ought to he held nndeniahle, when no def
culties are alledged again it, hutach as
are achnowled ed to he found in other Con
lAp. 2,
ofthe Soule.
tr
anOthere
I2
The Immortolity,
IIIB. I.
another.
'
IAP,v 2.
0ftheSoule.
1 ,_, .
13
14
The Immortalz'ty
LiB. I.
v,
it
JAP. 2,
ofthe Soule.
15
: elf Indzcerpiblc , as well as others Im
e'zetmble; and that as there is one kind of
Az-Xl o M E X.
The dzcwery ofome Power, Propcrty,or ope
ration Hncometz'ble to 'me Subject, A an
5733- Aby
SwhenP
tba am was
poken
unto
the RijvergNgm,
when
he paed
over it, and a-Tree by the commanduof
v-CHAP
_t 6
The Irhmortality
LIB. it
C H A P. III.
4..
The
am,
CAP.
o the Soule.
17
already
18
The Immortality
Lnz. I.
CAP. 3.
ofthe Soule.
19
ity of parts.
ance
zo
The Immwtality _
LIB. I.
CHAP. IV.
2. The
netion ofmuch
God,prejudiced
though the know
' ledge
thereofibe
by the
confoundednes
,and-upidity,_
of either u
peritious
or? profane
mein,that pleaethemr
lelves
;_
'
"
cerning
.i
l
i
CAP. 4.
et/ye Soule.
it
goodne,"
22,
The immortality
LlB . I.
- 1
CAP.4.'
drive Soule.
23 1
then
24
LIB. l.
omething
of o
nothing,
or how
the Divine
Eence
holds
cloelyand
inviincibly
toge
ther,is to trangres again the 3, 4, and 5,
Axiomes, and 'to appeal to a Faculty that
has no right to determine the cae,
C'H A P. V.
\
1, T/ze Denition belonging to all Finize and
'
__
'
we
CAP. 5.
ofthe Soule;
25
'
"
'
'
ture
26
The Immortall'ty
LlB . I .
'
t e
Cap. s,
. ofthe Soule.
27
. 28
The Immortality -
LlB. l.
rightly
CAP . 6.
of the Soule.
29
_CHAP. VI.
I, Axiome: that tend to the demonrating
30
I he lmmortalitj
LlB._I.
tion to the cverc Reaon, out of thee '
following Principles,
AXlOME XI.
AXIOM E III,
15 little Willi-3' 12', tbe "petition of it will a
monnt to coniderable mdgnitndes.
AXI
LIB. I.
GAP. 6.
ofthe Soule;
3l
T thee
FA Xt 0 ME XIV.
Magnitude cannot arie out of meer Non
Magnitndes.
_
tboogl
t, flat
'le into
'ill a
, and i'
itmdc ,
'lye
This
tinkS
nd
KI
IIY
32
The Immortality
LlB . I.
CAP. 6.
ctbe Soule. '
3;
Matter from whence this mocion comes.
'. t
AXIOMEXVIl-'f'
An Emanatitxe Eect a coexient with' tbe
'very tcb am'e of tbat Wbicb is aid to be
*
r
\.,
'
'
34
The Immortality
LIB.
AXIOME XIX.
There may be a Sublance of that high Vertue
and Excellency, that it may produce ano- '
ther Subance by Emanatz't/e caufality, pro
'vided that Subance produced be in due
CAP. 6.
Off/Je SOHICK
. now
36
The Immortality
LIB . I.
'
'
=_ -
Vmpo'v
CAP. 6.
oft/Je Soule.
37
r -
D 3
YCE
38
The immortality
LIB. I.
indicerpible,
and magnitude
yet intellectually
divi
ible, otherwie
iwould coni
of meet points, which would imply a con
tradiction. We have therefore plainly de
monrated by reaon, that Matter conis
of parts indicerpible z and therefore there
being "no other Faculty to give urage
again it, for neither ene nor any common
notion can contradict it, it remains by Axi
ome 5, that the Concluion is true,
vered, '
CAP. 6.
v aft/ye Soule.
39
'
D4
* would
4 o i
The Immortality
LIB ._ I,
and
-* -*i-C-'-'="I,
CAP. 6.
ofthe Soule;
41
CHAn
'w
42
The Immortality
*LI B -. I.
'
Bras,
4;
44
The Immortah'tj
LIB. I.
ome parts of that eence are not o well as
they may be, which is a contradiction in a
Being which is abolutely perfect. From the
Attributes of Indzterpihility and Self-mo
tion (to which you may adde Penetrability
from the general] nocion of a Spirit) it is
CAP .
ofthe Soule-'
45
them
46
The Imanortality
LIB . I.
themelvdsor what glue or Cement holds
the parts of hard matter in ones and
metalls together, or, if you will, ofwhat is
upercies is o mooth as
norhing can be conceived E
moother: [why does not
upon
UAP. 7. - ofthe-Soule.
47
upon another without any icking, eeming
as neceary tolour fancy as a Spirits aing
through all Bodies-without taking old of
48
The Immortolity
LiB. I.
CHAR
CAP. 8.'
oft/se Soule: , .
\J,.
49
'-
{*rl""'
'
'i
II
lrrii'i-ii
A'
. wi.- writ
LBIKVLY
cts' of
50
The Immortolit)
Lin. I.
;..
but
CAP. 8.
otbe'SouIeS. '
'53
we
52
The Immortality
i LIB . I.
over
- CAP.8.
Oflbets'wle- '
53'
2
name-ki_d
MW-*"_f,.m_ \
Bz
Siibje,
54'
The Immort'ality
LIBA I.
cHAn
CAp, '9.
ethe Soule.
'55
1.,
I . That it it qf
C nmall
H A P. conequence
IX. .,Fct_.:} to have
pra-vedthe
a Spirit._2." Po
The ibility
neceity
of -afexamining
the Exience of
Mr. Hobbs ha't Reaon: to the contrary,
6, Thefonrth. 7. The
8. The ixth. 9',
The eventh. 10. The eighth and la ax:
* cerption,
_ _1_
At,
,_ z
That
"
55
The mmonalzity
LIB- l
3'u_M-M
zj,
51;
'
' -
'
be
CAP. 9.
ofthe Soule.
57
in the
si?
The Imrhartality
LlB . I. i
aman
are joyned
houlday
together
an Incorporeal
deroy one Body.
another, fI/I
4. The econd place is in his Phychr,
Part 4, Chap, 25, Article 9. But it tis here
to he oherved that certain Dreames, ehccially
"a,
not
nor are now
Dreamet.
Forheretofore
the Apparitiont
menaccounted
thou ht they
aw,
l
fl
A'
theoryes
their
CAP.minde:
9, ofuch
terrihle
ofthe
Apparitions,
Phtmta'nes
Soule. hath
which
raied
hewe
59
in
" t
heen
thingsand
reallyaretrue,
illunder
deceittlly
the names
recei-ved
of Gho:
for
'
*_
book,
'5 . We
Partwill
I: Chap.
adde a5.third
Art.out
4, of
For
theeeing
ame
'I
Ghos,enihlehecies,
a hadow,
colour;
ound,
pace, che. vitpqtzear
to m' nolight,
lei'eefing
._; .=_-.x'-._*.v-*_o<-
'
_> j i "\
5 i
"
- ' >
'll'l
6o
The Immortality
LIB . I. '
brae
thought'
them
S iritt,
that Agent',
it, thih
aerealzand
hodiee
-, and
tho/in
invijihle
'
8. The
_
ofthe Soule.
v 61 J
'CAP- 9.
zi
lmowledg
Off-endenof
'preent
waei'Ihard
for
men to'conjceive
thoe nfe,it
Irn-'get
the
Fonc-y and in the Sene , itherwie then of
thin s really without ne.
62
The lmmortality
1 B . .
lightneth the whole viihle world.
'
e;
ay,
andLength,iBreadth
hath the Dimeniont
of' Magnitude,Body,
namely
and Depth
-, alo A
Tl
il
V-
'
CAP.9. 5 ofdveSoule.
63.
CHAR
*- f-*Fj-*.._5n=u s-uw
64.
The Immortalzity
CHAP. x.
1_ An Anwer to the
- L1B _ .
'
ExcerPtion. 2. To
=
'
2;
a;
_?*'
T
1.
i'-
,
l*
'_4 4____<_""
AeLA;h.
BTAP. to.
is;
' _, **
far forth
it dierefor-e
is cognocible
ue by
ct 'o
Axiome
r. as
And
when' to
he ayes
they have no Other Original! then' that of
ee
The Immortality
Liar. i
ml'
.'_ 13-4.'.'-'J)'-A.-
the
of their
Exience
then that
we knowledge
vainly imagine
them
to bezwhich
iis
'
grosly fale.
Forit is notand
the Superitious
Dreams and
Feiares
of Melancholick
perons, from which Philoophers and Chri
'*'*'A'*_'*3.'1*.*'*"J.'
CA. to.
of the Soule',
67 '
68
'1 be lmmortaltty
LlB . 1.
'
To
CAP. '0.
the upon'
third the
Ianwer,
Thatacting'
Spirits
do .
act.T0
really
Senes,b"y
uponv
Matter that aects the Senes z= and-ome
with Matter; it - -
aiaihly ollowesz
notion'
aspirt't
away." A :';-.'r
.'
- .. '
F3
rength
70
'The lmmortalitj
LIB . I.
UAP. to.
tyme dame.
71.
72
1'98 IMWM'U
pus. 1, =
weighed, they will be found of as little e cacy' to make good the Concluion as'ehe
n'i, ' The r'Argument runs thus, What
foe-vei- 'z'z 'eall,__'nii' haw ome Me: But
ape'-ire
can-have noaae,
But t ele
is isbe-lmi
Very
eaiiyTanwere-dg"
Pin' if nothing
' 3"
'
YFSWd'ATSUmcnt'is-diawn 'omthaie
- -*
2 ,*<
Pale:
cAp, to,
i ofthe Suuleii i
73
metime or erh'erzth'at her-lever. ne: cohldx endure to come'nearf ' the-not'ion-'of a- Spirit
again, not7o 'muchas to 'coni'deh Whether?
it: Were' al meet"- fug-bearegll-kjzr "ome reali.
is a Saw-kite?'FPenctraihie-j'and-hiderpihle;
tary-robe
beliewdlby- au-t'hog'zhat Would
Believe the'eRiEHeEQZaFHiTneQrPOreHJ SQHIL,
nordo-I belIeVefTMJHohhK 'his hee-"pied;"
F ey
7 4.
1 he 1mmortauty
L'J'Bi I;
a. ce
- -<, - ' :
4 .. -*
' that?
il.
CAP. 1 1,
75
otheSouIe,
wi
.C H A P. XI- '
Three
grounds Sio
to ance,i"whereofthe
ro-v'e ihe Exience of'
I. an
Immateriall
isfetoht fromthethePhanomenoin
Nature ofofMotion
God. 2. The
econdfrom
in'
the world. 3. Thatrhe Matter himelf
moveable, 4. An Ohject'ion that the Matter
' - 'may he/part eIfLrno-ued, Tar not,5'he
._'\-
A
n
thoe
kinds of- Spirits
which-we-haue dcfci3i
' ..'
'
t;
76
The Immortality
LlB. I.
poe him
to beQod
the Author
ofit.'V'i* Where
fore
though
be neither
He 'nor- *
Tangihle'z yrethis-very Idea re re entin' to
though
we hadno condently
OtherArgument
drawn
i from
ourSenfes)
to cmlude
' That Heis.
_* > *
tureac ndingllihqblcrby'pecicall di
Wces 'astbe 'Schoels Wkt mut have
every-w eke, the-very amezcmitdl pro.
, nitz
parties
-, and therefqre
of fit elf or
it mu
beeither
Withouti-mti,
'ele all
be
_ i
reaon -
CAPtJ'L
ofthe Soule.
it
Matter hould mOVe of it elfzlee then ans' Other; and therefore if there be'anyvuch
'
are
.
._-_M
832vL1.
. I.
78
The Imntortalny
LIB; I.
hare with all the re, Wherefore every
Planet could act-faile ofmelting it elf into
elf.
5.- But to thisI anwer, That r this
evaion of theirs is not o agreeable to ex
perience ; but, o far as either our Sene or
Reaon can reach, there is the ame Matter
A-'>:
*_-'.
'v
Vapours)
CAP. 11.
'qftheSoulcn
' 79
8e
ilo-n-e
, 'I/ze lmmort'alzty
LIB . L
vis is fale.
.
7. There is yet another EVaiOn or tWo,
which when they are anwered 'there-will be
no cruple remaining t'ouchig-thispointhe
r is, Thatlike
thenature
MattereVery
isall-w'heretzand
of it homeit 1at'5
e
n'eall,othe
- it
is the
commontoproperty
ofitall
to be
ofit *
elf
indierent
Maria' orRe
z- and
there'
fore, that it is no.won'der that ome ofit
moves and other ome of it regor 'Navel
t 1?
CAP. ll.
'
ofthe Scale.
Si"
it,--a'_n'd Reepsthat-rrtodi
enionzemctky
and
za erpe'cnauyl t'iljl agtix 'ome
other KA'gluf
_* whencecherearezbuttheretw* Amonges
; 'that renew E' the r; Thatzcwq aboluteiy
&oundy-'prayeres are-immediately eated
in 'are i'mtilje, S-ubj * ,_z'r-'tlteh which nothing Mee'nif more harh-and unhandonie to
_
_-
Y '
8z
-l-S'-*L F-x
'1 be 1mm0rtaat)
L 1 B . 1,
externall
violence-is
o,-thatgthough
byfkxiqme
47.,
Whence.
it zwill taken
follow
thee &If-xing parts of Matter mayre car:
Fricd'by other matter while they are-made
.fa,xo_i,t> YSE left freeitheyvwill;uddainly
t
re,
CAP. r 1 .
ofthe Soule. '\'
8;
re, they 'having the immediate caue of
: Fixation in themelves. Nor: can an one
ditu-__that thechange will be o u dain,
G_ a
Indeed
84.
The mmortality
LIB. I. *
'*'
* C H A P. XII.
'Mnwen
5_ The' econd
_v/1nwcr.-6_
Mr. Hobbs
his
ct- miahe,
of mal-ing
the-Ignorant:
ofSecond
'Can/'es the (tirely Seed
1.
'
Religion',v
'
' 85
'
G3
And
-_. ._
86
The Immortolitj
LIB.I.
And that every Motion or Reoctim mu be
a new Sena'tion, as well as every ceaing of
'
CAPi. 12.
ofthe Soule.
87
c"tI=1rrP.
-x.'d.
88
The Imottelig'
LIB. . I.
inable, it is plain
4-
to
Czxy, j 3.
of the Soule.
89
c H A P, xm.
*
'\
imagine
any'
but muAgent
needsto
'con
'ceive
ome
freenaturau,
or pontaneous'
be
the
* ' Caue
1. thereof,
' >ct when
* ' as' yet ' it; is clar.
c at
9o
-a
7/2e Immortaliity
'-. Li'fsi I.
Ji
"UmM:re
r-1-_=.-.
2.. But,
CAP. 13,
ofthe Soule.
91
r'
diction.
1
3. But this EvaionI have quite taken
away, by' o clearly - demonraring that the
notion ofaS irit implies no more contra
diction then t e notiOn o Matter z and-that
its Attributes are as conteivable' as - t-h'e
Attributes of Matter: o that I hope this
r '
_,
Argua
'i .i9;
TheImmortalitj
' LIB.I.
CA'Jg.
otheSoule.
_ _ I
leep,
will notofhisfeain'ge,
eemtoajee for
fear '6 .
forfeit'and
the pleaure
th'cnzl
i thee youngilads-importmre him - enoug ',-'
'
'
CltE,"
94
1 be immortality
LIB. l.
cite,werej it not to confute z it is o mon
rous and impious,_ But becaue no ore can
p' '
95 .
dam-t'
in thembyztwhich
is. that Kmndrdg:
- all _-$.ubl.unary
Cat-elde
-;.thinss>.
and are
framed
8,_-\ and governed;
by theireverall imprees
. \; _ _and
.
. i
impregnations have lled the whole. Earth
with vital Motion, raiinglinnuniorale orts
Flowers Herbsmnd
gutzof
the ,
. of
ground.i_iThee
havealoTrees
generated
thee-
poririonr
96
v -'-l'..'IB. I:
indeed
Wild;- Fvpzor,
in the
ver readftill
w0r
ene,Horrendnrn
r'ny rirmt,ai
very
and dangerous My ery, aving that'there
-"(\' .
CAP. 14..-
Ofthe Soule.
97
C H AP. XIV.
I'. That the Splena'or ifthe Celetiall Bodiei
pro-vex no Fore-ig t nor Sowraignt] that
they have
over m. of2.us,
ThatMathcmatt'callyv
the Stars can
have'
no hnowlea'g
(leman/hated, 3, The ame Conclu/ion a
rs
98
Thelmmartality - '
LIB. l'.
CAP. '14.
lothe Soule.
99
2. Thisa'ci'lesa
demonrates',
That
let the
Stm Weifwrn'z
and Staris
have what '
knO'WlCdg they'ctWill" o'other things, they
have ju none at'all' ous', norof our' aairs;
more' *
_u.-_.-
1 oo
The Immortality
Luz . I.
101
corpo- '
'- mz
'Ilze Immortalit'y- *
LIB. 1.
corporeall mOtio'n upon QUJ' Otgans,which
. tion of one part of Matter again another, . and that Motion is evervr, and perception
-followes,andthat therekoreperceptionmu
necearily follow the laws of Motion, land
' '
'
"'_\
'
judgez
CAP. 14.i
ofthe Soule.
l o;
cern in andr
this mct0tion'being
leer Object-the
Earth, his
vigour
F o vehemently
.'
H 4.
but
1 04
The Immcrtality
LLB. I.
'
'
qurte
- CAP. 14,
ofthe Soule.
1 05
manent,
1io6
The Immortali
LIB ;_I,
' me? I
'CA_P. 14;
ofthe Soule; -
zoi7
Natuni or-n'o.
.->
' .-_.r
'*
Stars
.z' o 8
The Immortalz'ty
LlB . I.
_BOOK
CAP. 1 .
A ofthe Soule.
1 09
of:adthix'hrbbridii'
BooxII, CHAP. I.
conrmation of the
Anwer to the
econd Eva/ton. 14., The plan-he: ofthe
xth Axiome. Is. The proof of the fe
venth,
ecte
1 'o
The Im'hortalz'ty
Ll-Bi. II -
AXI>
- CAR. Ii.
oftheSoule;
'AXIioM E-XX;
ii r
'w ='>
there he any
''
1 l2
LIB. lI.
AXIOME XXI.
So far at their' continued Reaction reaehes, o
CAP. '1.
ofthe Soule;
trg
-. et CPnFsiiI-tbits-iezwtrro-and aide-fate
i Wctiwz 'Qliiiridsptidznmaf negery
&lip/3' I-'F'il'T-.-'?::.';--:z:o
'10 ,z-t
lhtjter
. ":A)X'I=Q>M,Fz
aIZYhLe'-zihriety'
T I Kz-'i'w
'I
I!
'Gii HOJZ
e? Pereeftibht
Linne-et:hither-'al Moiiontthe'nit
', ay, it' attire 'Perteptions'z joinetactionrar
' $.TO
i"modztrttttd
heartrgthis
one Truth
agdznMr.
another;K'l'__'4-=A_
Hohihtiieitis
pwnrrr 'of
A his 3 eale
t* i' "with
all willingnes
imaginable,
or'
'
I
> rather
1 r'4.
LIB . Il.
., themelves._
but the other
cannot;
the-perceptions
. man
be of.but
onekikii'nd
in. both,
,- they neither 20'them Perceiving anything
zhULFOL'PQTQQUiHPPrCHJOHSQ uchias-they. feel
CAP. l .'
et/te Soule.
ZAX 1 o M
'15 i
XXIV.
6.BY
a meer
point
of Matter Ipoint,
dOe not
mealra
meerct
Mathematicall
but
a Kerfect Par-ziz'taa'e, or the lea Realit] of
<
Ia '
. Yon
1 16
The Intmartaligi
, LIB. II.
9. Nor
*AP. 1 .
ofthe' Soule. -
1 17
9. Nor
that isEvaion
anycontrariety
thing avail;
le,
Thatisthere
not any
oif
1 18
The Immortality
LlB. Il.
CAP.., 1.'
(ofthe Soule.
* p 1_19
checkered
A _ , .
- i
ii
.l p thru : avainzz 3
tzas
chew.ings
Ihave
inKhMdiQin-H
ma
repreented
rich; be F',_.. .
- z-izg
As is,gures-3
thy; herd),- '15 ,i* 2' *
-Hi-.tbeSe\zt_itzM=iti
. ner, and I'. tealhbh'
.'
'
163. Will-&Will.
be r.i T .; z* " : p
zlornirom
Eagitiectctlyi
5_;__
i ct
,i
ctI4-
- .
.;
i 'i
_
toward
i 20
ct The IMmOrt..-Iit)'
Luz. H.
"v' '
frot
' l
ZAPu 1,
ofthe Soule.
'1 2'
n unexceptionable conrmationok'our r:
)emonration of the weaknes of thee
>r
,..._.
., "*'
' '.
1 a3
1 be Immortalztj
LIB . 11 ..
J AXLOME xxv.
Whatever impreion or art: ofany impre
5: op-qrenot received , y thee perfect Parg
vitude or Real] oint of Matter, are not
" -
CQAP. 2. .
ofthe Soule.
rzz
CHARHAJ
I . That Matter he capahle ofSene, Inani
mate things are o too wind of Mr, Hobbs
his wavering in that point. 2- An Ennme
ration ofeveral! Facnlties in m that Mat
ter
nncapahle
of. 3,,iilt
That
Matter
in is
noutterly
kind of
Temper-attire
'capahle
of
Scne_ 4. That no one pointiof Matter can
he
the ofuch
CommonPoints
Senorium.
5 , Nor
a male
titude
receiving
ingl]
thctc
n 24
The Immortalz'ty
LIB . II. i
'
'
(th0-ugh,
QAP.2. '
. odnSaule- i
12;
Sene,
he can.
from
aying and
thatyetthey
are zcthardly
onely.abain
he 15.,mm
hieofwillallow-ing
them Memory,
"et
they
have whetherhe
iwill forWhich
ma," ighe
give them Sene, As for Example, inthe
2.. But
content our
aves
onely
with we_w11_l,.n0t_
thezdilicmeryofJthis
onciug'ly
incOnvemence. othis'bold iAdtidnLbHr
l 26
The Immortality
LIB.' ll.
CAP." 2.
ofthe Soule.
1 27
t, thatfrom
i'the
Whole, asaectedwit
itmt, bfei'ng
the
>re's'
:om'hioniicnfo>jinnti)be
Wiousithspcsihercdf.
_ "any,mu',
ie'variouly aected, o thaenopbjeet will v
'eem'homoge'neallz
me '2 2. Which Truth,
'als a'p hall
earesrom
Wrihet'illuj
frar'c'
by a- homelybui
>reentation.'
i- 'Sii ' are' well A''gcam'ff
'oitl'd
He?
vhe'ttethcy
hers, Bullets*an__js_pur-1f9w931silla
liiys-intermielllribxidlt
n '
me with another: on anyju eshe?
e'CEiVeSz upzzongal'thes nuzejhereoi
nice
iPT-this'wod- be. 01:"thea: bverall
feat. thre
bvel- particles
'ite
captive:
128
The Immortality
Ll 5, l _
this Matter
.-alone
were.
senitive,
and: the
fother-'s
not; and
o it
would
be 0ranted,=thiat
' Bbllies),'l_ias'
no: all' Mortar
"Side,
_(no.- not.
Suchaj
; o. laud),
temperied
rising,Matter
Itenuious
'from Lz'oth'efs,
4',*_Whencez{weniay
fciondu'die,
iTlint',
Ome ilch'ubtilerationally
Mattetas
"this, is"
- ,
'
. '
A
' in
-AP . 2'.
oft/ye Soule.
t 29
Whole '
1 5 U
1. 'lc Junnull-uut)
1.' lo - kl .
CAP. 2.
ofthe Soule.
:;1; 1
anction-3' Ifit be Fluid,the images OfObi
jects will be prone to vanih uddainly, As
alo to be perverted-ot turned contrary
Wayes. 'For example _C-. 'a pat'mld
*1HJ
tide
of
this
uid
Matter.
:receivii
ing an im'Pres from B. mu feel i, .
it as coming'from B: but-it' t'oy- . _
-*
J;
till the end' of that terme. If Vicid, there is the like inconvenience, nay it.is.the un-'
itte' ofall for either receiding of Motion,
or continuing it, and therefore unlikely "to
be the Seat of either Fancy' or Mer'mry. For
K 2
ome
. 1 32
The Immortality
LIB. II .
ung ormore
up into the'
canuPwiards
becOme when
more
proneAire,
to ie
ey have once ceaed from Motion -, for
..
c .
_.
.byv.lines
from I,
..thet;wo0bjectsi;.
uA. B. and
2
'1 -.- 75 D
'QWherebY the 'or '.
I,
dierence of remotenes; QFFAL E. above C.
;E,o_r ofthe widienes of A. Bzbove C. D.
can-be dicernedz
z'; for borh rthe Objects
'.make.'one
and. the.ame-iginatnre
in the
'matter-15-
-- '
v i -
"
comprej
CAP. 2.;
K3
that
134
The Immartalitj
LIB. II,
monrated.
.
, 1 I. Laly, we are concious to our felves
ofthat faculty which the Greekes call dil
sidmov, ora Power in our d'UN, notwith
anding any outward aaults or importuv
nate temptations, to cleave to that which it
vertuous and hone,- or to yieldtq pleaures,
'
*'
' '
natural!
CAP. 2.
aft/92 Soule.
13;
K 4.
found
5:
136
The Immortulity
LIB. I1 .
'
C H A P. III.
I. Mr. Hobb's hh A'guments wherehy he
would prove all our actions neeeitated.
Ho':
ment.
fourth Argmnent.
s. What mu he the
CAP. 3.
of the Soule.
1 37
I,
.) 3 8
The Immortalzity
LiB . II -
z and that
caue
'._A._ _.J
CAP. 3;
ofthe Soule'
1; 9
[40
zermes,
'
es
\CAP.3. x
ofthe Soule.
14 1'
es 'having no pretence to conclude any
thing, let us ee how far they will prevail
in this, taking no thing, for o-Eenoe, or
no Modication of Ejemepr What will com'e
nearer to the Matter in hand, nolFaoulty o
hj it
14 2
The Immortaltctty
LlB. lI .
CAP. z.
ofthe Soule. 4
1 43
an Eence that can, as it lis, exciteinit
elf the variety of uch Phantames as have
begg'd Principle.
8. But however, from this precarious
ground
will infer,
that ofthis
whenever
we iecthave
a Will tohea thin
, the cau'
Will
not
the Will it
hat omething ele not in our
own di/oingz the meaning whereof mut
be, That whenever we Will, ome corporeal!
l 44
'Ihe Imnortality
LIB. II.
"
"'
'
whereof
CAP. 3.
ofthe Saule.,
1' 4;
ly_ inrelleekuallz
the' econd eems-13
'
' And Lg
a Veryv
1 46
The Immortality
LIB . II.
This
'
if
'At-a
r!
r:
CAP. 3.
ofthe Soule.
, r47
it is no:
but be
So that
rightly
plainly
_ _ _. _- .
_L
1 48
The immortality
LIB . I i. i
, CAp. 3,
-q
oft/Je Soule.
149
FS._
ia5?
Ur
L3
arms
1 5o
The Immortalit)
LlB . II.
.' ....
uc
1' CAP. 3.
oft/Je Soule.
1 51
1 SZ
'1 be lmmortaltty
LlB. 11.
' 2'0'.exceeding
That the the
Praoienoe
of God is o
vand
vcomprehenion
of va
our
thoughts, that all- that can be afely aid of
thingit does-ibfeknow;
it mu
'- **. Whence
' '
follow,
CAP. 3;
of the Soule.
t 53
1 54
The Immortality
LIB. II.
mens actions are ometimes free and ome
times not free -, but-in that they are at any
time free, isa Demonration that there is -
CHAP. IV.
1. An Enumeration ofundry opinions con
cerning the Seat of Common Senfe, z.upzm
uppoition that me are nothing but meer
CAP. 4.
ofthe Soule.
15;
ourt
1 56_
The Immortality
L 113. II.
from
CAP. 4.
ofthe Soule.
l 57
andICl'l
all-the
partsai ofthe
Body, comthat '
ittwixt
may,itby.
or uch
perception,
mand the'motion o 'the 'Foot or little
of
1 58
'I be Immortality
LIB . H.
as
CAP- 4.
ofthe Soule.
159
1 60
The Immortality
LIB. II.
CHAP. V.
1 , How Perception afexternall Ohjects,Spon-=
tancom Motion, Memory and Imagination,
i CAP. 5.
oft/ye Soule.
'6 [
w
inuiciency of flat? cantri-zjnrzce'for t/mt '
L ', ptz-oe. 6. 'Afurt/'er demonration Z/(fkc
'
Memory cannot
ful-um' the may
dr
cribedz
8, NorbeImagination,
9. abo-g'e
A Dzctri
bution out of Des-Cartes oft/e Punction?
X,THE
umThat
Of 'this
mg'
in brief
i be this,
the Abue
Glmdnlzt
Pinealis'
is
thewmmon-Semjef or Perctyient (full 'ob
uch
1 62
'The Immortality
LiB. Il.
then can be made out by this Hypotheis , That Perception of Objects, Spomaneour Mo
tion , Memory and Imagination, may 'oe all
performed by vertue of this Ghmd'la, the
Animal
CA'.
ofthe Soule.
16
Animal
o
the
BodySpirits,
g as we'and
hall meer
vplainlyorgaiiiz'ation
find, thoiigli
but upon an eay examination.
Ma
eyes
1 64
The Immortalit)
LIB . I I .
Animal
_'._._-_,i
CAP.5'.
oftheSoule.
_x6s
0ppoiteMucles,the known
Inruments of pontaneous
Motion -, K. ome part of
_,
into
t 66
The immortality
LIB . I L
CAP. 5.
ofthe Soule.
'67
object,
1 68
The lmmortality
LlB. ll .
Object, after the Comaon has by inclining
it elf thitherward determined the coure
o the Spirits into the ame. Pores. For this.
could onely repreent the Figure ofa thing,
not'the Colours thereof. Beides aman may
bring an hundred Objects, and expoe them
to our view at the ame diance, the Eye
keeping 'exactly in the ame poure, ino
much that it hall be neceary for thee ;
images to take up thevery ame placeof *
the Brain, and yet there hall be a. diinct
remembrance of all thee zwhich is impo
rble if there be no Soule in us, but all be
CAP. <_.
ofthe Soule.
I 69
'
1 70
The Immortoligr
L IB. II.
_i-.-_
CAP. 5 .>
ofthe Soule.
17]
Imagination:
made
at ple-'ign
, -or nally
octf
Remimoenoy
, when
he earches
out
'72
'1 be Immortatty
LlB . II
quae-77
Cap. 6.
ofthe Soule.
17;
'
.,);
ti'
CHAP. VI.
tuhz'rly- all'the
ayn
time:
Seat.
of'
'iCornmou
Sene,
w an
few ot/tom
have
.-
1t,THere
now onelyTwo Oini-.
i r _ ons to remain
be examinedzthe.'one-,That
place:
ofthe Sinall Marrow whennatomiscond i
174
The Immrtalzg
LIB. lI'.
_'
'
j CAP, 6.
oftheSoalo.
17;
lt
1 76
The Immortality
LIB. II.
it is n0t the Animal! s irits that is it.
5. Again, that whic is o confoundeda
Percipimt, how can it be aright Principle
of directing M0tion into the Muclesf For
beides what diorder may happen in this
function upon the diracted repreentation
of preent Objects, the power of thinking,
excogitatingand deliberating, being in thee
Animal Spirits alo, (and they having no
means of communicating one with another,
but juling one again another; which is
as much to the purpoe, as if men hould
knock heads to communicate to each other
their conceits of Wit) it mu needsollow
'CAP. 6.
ofthe Soule.
1- 77
r;ax.-;ar*.-'-.
Thought; unles
that themelves
thee particles
conceived
tio gure
intowere
the '
hape othoebythings
they
which _
isimpoble
Axrome
26.think
Andof,uppoe
,-
N.
But
dai;
, 1 73
Jbe lmmortality
LJB. II.
But what then r' Truly the encounter will
be very unfortunate. For St. George indeed
may eaily break his Lance, but it is impo
ible that he hould by juling. again the
Particle 'in the form of a Cale c'onveigh
the entire hape-of himelf and his Hore
.monratiom.in'Mnthematiek-t,;0t ofparLof
>-
t at
CAP. 6.
ofthe Soule.
179
z .
N 2
o. 'We
i
l
1 80
'The lmmartality
LIB. Il.
tinctured wit
CAp. 6.
, ofthe-Soule.
18]
maginable doubt or cruplebe left behind,
'
'
'
-L-_'\ _,f\_ r
'*P\
.\
.
-"UYT-c',, *.'\* am _ ,rw-sc.
*-- :- is -:->**-. -' -'-.-,\lnp(
3-
'
'
*\
..\ \*
'*Il
\\
v'
\*
_k
.
_'
,-
l" .k/
"V
'i
4*'.
'Q'
'
"
. Bells' "
* '
X''s'f) W
no
n-*:tA
.-_=\
tr_\-\\*\-7
x82
.
The immortality ,
CHAP.VI*I.*
1
'-
'
CommonI-1_.A
'Senfezk
eated
fonnemherelin
the
Head,
caution
for-the
choiceiofth'e
particular place thereof. 12. That' the
whole Brain 13 not it; 13. Nor Regi'us his
f'nalloltd Particlez 14. Nor any external!
.,
/
gqmmm'
CAP. 7.
ofthe Soule.
ti83'
me Senfe:v
and'tbc
'Common
Senfe'withv
conider;
*re*d
together
'are lik'e
a Circle
ve .
lines draWn from vthe Citcumference-to the
N 4.
Soule
l 54
1 ne tmmortattty
-.LJIB. 11.
trunk of theBodyz
beides-ail
thie-lintteriov
ourzpartsof
the Head.
zAllr whichxan
no , X
more
'i-e,- then. the;- Eye; CaB:hGzZf,_*NF:
Ear-ecanmell.-*
T (z 4.; the'i i ,
r?.==3.-,Bedes thiszall thoe Argumentstbag ' X
"
* . -
* it
CAP. 7.
18<
art
"
ome
186
The lnnnortaliy i
EIBJI.
'*
sow-31,
CAP. 7'.
ofthe Soule;
187
elf
does acknowledg
in the
of their
Treatie',thait the power
of end
Motion,
of "
' V'YillI
'88
LlB.ll.
'
' W en
_CAP. 7. i
,oihe Soule.
1 89
na imprees, mu not he it
in any high
temper or agitation,
" '
*
9. "Wherefore it? is a very rah thing to
., 90
The Immortaliity
v xLlB. II.
tie ,
CAP._-7,
ofthe Soule.
X -1 9 I
y tied, Sene and Motion will be- reerved
from the ligature up towards t e Head,
1 92
The Immartalitj
LIB. II.
CAP. 7.
ofthe Soule.
'z
fectly olid,more hard then Marble, or Iron.
But this Invention being but a late freak of
'his petulant fancy, that has an ambition to
make a blunder and confuion of all Der
n.
x will
1 94.
The Immortality
LlB. Il.
CAP. 7.
19;
__
02.
there
X 1 96
The Immortality
LIB'. ll.
'
,' _
Dej
CAP. 7.
ofthe Soule.
197
what part of the Body he pleaes) could be conveniently eated in uch dull pay
ix,
'
vO 3
imaginer
1 98
'1 be Fmmortatzty
LIB. lI .
C vH A P. VIII.
i. nient
The Situation
reaon ofhis
o inion,
the 2,ton-ve
of the/e
spirits,
That
econd, that the Spirits are the immediate
-inhrument of the Soule in all her uncti
onr_ 3. The proof ofthe econ'd Rea on from '
drP-r
CAP . 8.
ofthe Soule.
t 99
O 4. -
deare
2 5o
The Immortality
Luz . II.
inventions,
' -
'
thereof
was the and
fountain
thee pure aniL
ubtile Spirits,
pleaeofthe'melvesve,_
much,in that
'thati ippocratdt,
Oracle of
Phyitians,
thethey
gravefancied
and wie
'
'
$ '
'
-'
picant. ,
CAP. 8,
ofthe Soule.
20 t
I '
Corporeal:
1 ne immormmy
LIB. II.
zo z
Cor ered, yet to chue the free, ubtile
an mo active Matter to compound her o,
that their imaginations could excogitate,
And Lacretins, the mo condent ofthe
Epicttrean Sect, thinks he has hit the naile
on the head in his choice, De rernm NatJih,
3. where he concludes thus,
'
., I
CAP. 8.
ofthe Soule.
20;
acts,
ill ue.
iever
7. he
And
to does
makemo
yet acertainly
ep further,
That
ocular demonration that Henriem Regim
brings Philo. Natur, lih.4. cap.16. eems to
me bOth ingenious and olid. It is in a Snail,
35
'2 04
The Immortalzity
C-AP. 8 .
ofthe Soule.
20
206
tion.
The Immortaltity
LlB _ II.
CAP. 8.
t the Soule.
207
tuauon
398
The Immortality
LIB.]I.
Nerve;
CAP. 9.
ofthe Soule.
209 i
t a '
. o.
e m. '
Tw
.ZH
_, ..
. .
1.
'zoi
tirp-'a
whiie,*and,-li'en'w ome' fewOvb'v
juitions made by*ome.i-Yate.:'Authours',
Who-again the-common ream ofall other
Philoophers ,z Phyitiaris: and Anatomis,
Main; For'
Zro have' no
ThePores
Immortalitj,
they
or CavitiestoLIBJIJ
receive
them -, and beides, it is plain that what is
nid in them is nothing but a milky white
juice, as is oberved in the pricking of a -
Laly, if Spontaneous
t.
2. For
r'CAP.9.
ofthe Soule.
2l1 *
2. For how can the Nerves derive-juice
if they have no Pores,or arenot o much as
Nor is there
'
ptacle
Spirits of
in 'S,tercore0us..,excrement.
the-&Ventricles Of the Brain,
The -*
it,
a'2
1 be mmortalitj
ome
like ., moiis ' found
at : ,thicuch
bottome
ofthe Sedim'ent
Ventricles,aswhich
na
ture dichargeth through it- paages,where
bythe
Spirits.
areleftfatculencY
more' pure.
But bein
eaue . this
necearyv
is found
thee Cavities, tn-'concludethat that is the
onely ue ofthem,. is as ridiculous as tain
e it
- t at
CAP. 9.
of the Soule. -
If;
poers
of this-ancient
and'7' ond
very imple
and care-les.
J ' Opinion
* iare
' ct
5. 'That of the Ligature proVes nOthing,
For though theNerve betwixt the Ligature
and
the yet
Finger
well ofenough
oredbeing
with
Spirits,
the be
Centre
Percept'ion
'nor
, and
there being
an' interruption
and there
diviion
betwixt
thqSpiriitSthat
are
'continued to their ComMOn-Senpriwm, and
- - ,
which
21 4
The Immortality
ell
LIB. II.
_.
"a,
WNLMSJI
LA."
eAs
-W-B__-L _MN
and hort paage of thedrtm'e Carotid-'gate carried thither. For ione part of the Blood '
*-..4
\.
.
,
.,_'t_'-1
'
'
3;'a
.*
'i
a. CAP, 1 o.
\ ethe Soule,
2 t 5w
it.
'9
it?"
Y
'N
'97
1'7474.
''=r'-i-,:_'f- Q_.'.*TW\:-I
CHAP. X.
I. That the Soule 12: not conned to the C0m*
mon Senorium. a. The r Argument
from ther Plaick power of the Soule,
3. Which is conrmed from the gradual!
dignity of the Sou'ler Facultiet, ofwhich
taa Plaickxir the lowe/ii, 4. External]
'l
all thence, uppoing that the Seat oCom- r='*-e:*.,w-:_ mon Sene, The reaon of this conceit of
P 4.
his
2 '16 -
The Immortality
LIB . II,
his is this, That whatever is in the re o - the Body, may come to pas by powers
meerly Mechanical -, wherein he does very
uperitiouy tr'ead'in the oote'ps of hiSZ-z
Maer Dear-Certes. But for my-own part,I
cannot
dienr, ofo
I nding
any '7;" i''
ucientbutgrounds
vnovellin anneither
Opinion,
nOt'd-i cover any.uch-thing, ithe r rudi-. - ments o-lie being out o ome liquid howv '
mogeneall
Matter of
-,* ' and
it 'is again reaon', i ' '
thatthe
rumbling
Atomesorzcorporeall
particles. hould produce snch' exquiite
irkm'es of cmatures, Wherein the acute wit
ll:
ofthe Soule.v
z 17.,
' CAP. lo,
micarriages demoprate. For there is no
Matter o pervcrh 'and ubborn but his
Omnipocency-zcould-tamc; zwhence there
-. would'be no Defects nor Monroitiesitt
._ the generation of
nimals. Nor is it o
through
n 4
2, 1 8
The Immortalig'
LlB .
through all the members thereof.
3. The congruity othis Truth will ur- _
ther dicover it elf, iwetonider the na
ture of the faculties of the Soule (ofwhich
.,
Feeling,
CAP. r o.
ofthe Soule.
219
to uppoe,aBear
believe that uch
horrible
Ob
i. For
ject as,
or an
Tiger,
by tran
mion of Motion from it through the eyes
ofan Animal to the Comrrion,hall o reect
22o
The Immortalziu
LlB . II.
- -
StMMCk,
CAP. 1 o.
ofthe Soule.
22l
unity of the'SoaI
inzthis ene it
'-
Fami
32l
1 De 1mmarmmy
LlB U.
'
Soul
-.
CAPJ.
of the Soule.
2 2;
224
The Immortalig a
LIB.!La
The Line A. B. from the Object A.*C:._
bears again that point in the borrome 9'5
G,
-R_
*i.
'.'
'
CAP. w.
otbeFauleii
ct
225
r!
U-if.at."
I;
Q__
it
ct
3IO
1 be immortality
LlB . U.
L.
CHAP. XI,
..'.';."Z"Z..'
-\
'
- 4- Of Reaon
Mover), en whet/ver:
;_, 'ber-A'
any.
Merksinzezzteia.
. 5. That.
ele Spirit: are the; immcilimzlnmmm;
, w?
CAP. 1 r.
'ofthe Soul
of the Soule.
227
every' where;
"
driM-andbth'erbperationst
=i theNainiefSeh
werz'ienti01ried='.-I or'
wehavealreadydemo:
Rtated-itheiei-'two Jthh'lg
them; comb-2
a, 28
tLIB , u_
preence; thesegzamedzyuimmediate
In'rumentjhe x 'ritzs,1by;vsrme:_owbde
caminuity- to-t aim dicamon Senfo
aw';.thelmagk of. Imms: Jewry Obiqct
xmainly Exerded
Sepizitsz, dreafzhr-fTx
make omdio ' i hF-mwzczcexxfubv
* wM-i I! FL fziz
ieapart by iecmzzmmrpxszzzaculeyzw; ,
Pith of the Brain contribute; make
B _
OXIS
.zz9
-- _-
Q_3
upon
' 2.; o
The Immortality
ALIB . II.
carefully
nd
on etean-intoher
purpoe-imprints
the-ISene.
.ea. as deep
ly asjhe
zinwarid
This
Rrmyzimdtz to. think en-zfupit an Idea 'will
leen in time, and be o'quite ent-,tha;
CAPJ'.
oftheSoule.
zgl
6. Dctcfuemde
But Purge-'faine
ariesoneither
meer
of thinking
uch anoutObof
ject, or on others that are linked in with it,
'
(Let
guide?
233.
Tbelmmortalitj '
LIB. II.
*_._ n_ A4_
' - -> .;
re'
'
' better
EAPJ 1,
ofthe Soule. ;
' 23 zkv
'
'
puted
z 34
The Immortalig'
'LIB. II.
ceary
'l
CAP.i I .
ofthe' Soule.
23; ,
1 -_ ii.
ll
236
_.Y>be\ Immortalz'ty
LlB . II.
. -_-_-:-; ,5: .
'
;_
-.7QHAE
CAPJZ.
ofthe Soule.
237
CPfAP. XII. *
r. m 'Anfwek-to 'an .Objectia'},* That-Mr Ar: _
3. (The
Anwer 10 'In objection.
44. zTlzc econd, 'Anwer coning affaur'
Pints. , 5 . fir, That the Hyotbc: afu
' conance is more agreeable.- to Reaon t/zm
&the.
and Gopdm: o Godwgne t/ie
2. Hb timeaxz AJ alo-the fad'afPfo
.-.>+Yideme1'nrtbc.-Wvrld. 9. The econd part
3, thee-cond Mhwer'lmt 'be Pucxi' ence
- elf (LLSMWT-be 4 e ofhi' P ilofa
; hmxin ad. Agig at hjdjt 'Incorporeal.
Egypt,
12. That
z ame;
z; 8
The Immortallty
LIB . II.
1.
-
i 7
"i- b
$0phin$z
b'ecaue ome ofthem,"
and thoe
of
not, eke ilbiltvalidit'y;
prove what-'is
Very
nfzclzz
'=: .: I
arily
A the Soule.
2z9
No an: nue"
- Leo
The lmmortah'ty
Ll-BJII
P'veextenee To'- the Souls of Brutes is' 'ah
very
Fair introduction
to the
'belief
the
PMMiece-dfi
the Smls
Of Men
alo:of_
53 :'yCt-*
the equ'el ishot at ell neceary, but one-may
be-withoutthe'other.
'
The econd is this, That'i
9- ' the-'edueli
'
were gramedghh no AbFui-dyean beds?
tected froni 'thence inand
= Reaon,
'if the
pre'jui *
dieesioEducat-ion;
thelblinde'
Fugg'eii-F
On -Ounito'ncerhed FQC'RHIESF, that have'ir
t e 'inbezrn'ed
Phriloopl'rer'sfoail Ages,-*th'eke*lieing-eai*ee
any'
of uonftlfenieer'li
theriizkhat held thejSOuFQ
when:
"i'rtetZT'
he ctNamr'ei
'and
Reaon,
but " aeree'dal
0'7 her Pto
'Frkexieheeg
That Me'h'iaiis'vno
t-Judviei
aeyl 'to
inis-Controverj;
MiahizzzThacabide-ib?
Trazeq.
Win and &meer- aee-as-int'riixat'e
coneeiwbleas fh-is'oppdctiGpinion.._ i; .-_- '._
'Anwer
7 l 3.' [hall
good-'in
malieaili
order.
theef'ou'rpakts
' The with' of
1 ri 'We-hall? manhead-if we eompar'ebitl
with, thoe Opinions that>iifnd in' conipei'
4- -ct'*
that
CAP. 12.
ofthe Soule.
7 34:
od;
'
mty I
34:
The Immartality
'
LIB.]I.
i."-
we
CAP. 12.
ofthe Soule.
24;
*-'
'
'
R z
091
._ 2_44
The Immartality
LIB. ll,
zerven]
vere, and
ofrheinnm
theyoffortune,
undergoe _ct
mlamiti'es
randnatures,
aperitie:
zapdad drudge-'tare Fare, Mjafunifhmmt
CAP. l 2.
ofthe Soule;
24; '
buines,
fewofinances
herein, as i'
athe
pledge
of theome
Truth
my generalllqon.cluon. Let us ca our Eye therefore into
what corner of the World, we will ,_.th_at
i
r. *
'
B'z
has
346
_The'ImmrthliU
ter'eoChri'itifii-'t z yetthi's0pini0n o
the Ptee'xtezztj of? the Soule, in which
Chritianity di', not-intereit'elf, cannot'
'but-be judged-From' the-Tei-mony o thoe
youm'ay'
plainly-he
byof
thOe'
nttlet that
are
tal'lecteither
LMAZZME
'Cjih'ziehzitztlt',v
which
Tletho 'land 'If/Ellzitave Cominented upon.
z'fojthee you?
adde the abrue Philo
feph
ofthe
arette,
which' they call their
- Cahhnlii, o'Fwhieh? the Soules Pretextence'
' makes a coniderable part, as all the lear
- ' 'ned o the Few: doe confes. And how
. fna'turally applicab'le _this Theory is to thoe
Three
'*
v.
do'
VCAP. tz.
athe Soule.
247
R'4.
Fitinm,
248
The Immortality
L 1 B .l[.
ir-inns.
of his Age, exprey concludes, that the R-atiomll Soule is both a diinct Being-from
CAPJ 2..
a the Soule.
249,
culiar form.But* thoe that dene otherwie,
_ Hapmrhrimor My'sa-t,aith he,aia*we_p e'i 'm (par-in
V wile-um si; aiuAhs EMv'uB-ai' (DE-i 'fixt/m'
i. e. The] ea/e no
*'
RPPCJ
250
The Immortality i
LIB.][_.
.J
Che. r 2'.
ofthe Soule;
W' dictnmathis
25 t
"rhV'VOJV fadrov
2 z
The Immortality
LIB . II.
them.
'
.
-.
\\'
C H A P. XIII.
I. The thirdpart of the econd Anwer, That
theforgetting ofthe former ate ie no good
argument again the soules Praeexience.
2, What are the thief caue: of Forget
fulne/f. 3. That they all eonire, and that
in the hi he degree, to detroy the memory
ofthe ot erate. 4, That michance: and
have here
quite inthe:
taken life.
away 5.the
Meit
Dieaes
mory ofthings
That
is impo/Fhle for the Soule to rememher her
former condition without a Miraele. 6. The
I,
CAP.1g.
oftheSoule.
25;
pain,
2, 54
'JI/ie Immortalzity
LiB .
CA9,1_3_
ofthe Soule.
255 '
out
r 3 5.of the
Wherefore:
fore-named
'without-a
Hioriaue'
miracle
. it- is
. was
256
'Ihe Immortahty
LIB.!I.
of
thee'
parts of their
Soulesitmakes
the
soule
a Dice'rpihle
' eence-zctk
is encou
ceiVable how thee im- parts hould make
up one Soule-fore the Infant: a thing rid_icu-"
CAP. 14.
ofthe Soule.
257'.
1n
'1
.\
\
C HAP. XIV.
I, The knowledge ofthe dierence of Vehi
cles, and the Soules Union with them, ne'
2. That though
\S
doe:
258
The Immortality
LIB. Il .
<4Y_huni:'4 _ 1_
ike-2'
no',, &LA-1;
"' A
CAP. 1 4.
of the Soule.
z 59
rations,-..
260
'Lbe lmmortahty
LIB. 11,
Yati'ons, and the immediate inrument of
"
'l
: .
X
. l
'"26"l
yedeecent
ary to
it,out'of
for this
Pthe
ofuppoe
the Soule
herpurp'oe'eaieryV-ehicle
jnto this terrerial Body," and bemearing
;_ 3
' U
26 2
The immortality
Luz . Il.
-unanirnouy determined. - 5
*p
/ Ages, andinythezythereal for ever. '583 zBut this' makeslittle to the I clearing
of the mannerzjqf their decent ei; go'n-saw,
Fhc' Univcrez
' it* is'* manifei thatthepm
itte;
CAP. '4.
ofthe Soule.
26;
S 4
from.
364
Tbe'ImMm-talig
tLm. Il. _
_ -_
,'ai-e ome 'touches-that will' iu'their'PerccL -- ydon eem? pleaant, whether-our Jud e:
CAP.L4. _
0tbeSauIc.'- "
v265
or
ome il-lta
inthe Meat'may
the
congruity
oin either'ide,
and- then break
the action
will'ceae with the-pleaure thereof. 'And
upon this very account mayaiSoul be conZ
'
"
"
gu ty
266
The Immortalxlty
L IB . lI.
culty in her decent, as Hawks and Kites by
their ght or melling y directly to the
'
- \
'
who
CAPJy.
othe'Soulc.
'z6'7t
this' equel
didhath
necearily
reult
from them,
Than/Je
Soals
ofMen and
BezF/lr'dia'
Ene
-exi, yet- to unprejudiced vrea on 1 thereis
no Aburdity nor Inconvenience at all in the,
Opinion. ,And therefore this obacle be- *
'a
I. What is meam
CHAP.
hy theXV,
Separation-'of
'ix
the
ct
4: That'
268
The [Mmortaltity
LlB.'II.
1 3. Of Caizdans
* CAP- '5.
1 of the Soule.
269
is to be out of the World: the Whole Uni-' v
Vere being o thick et with Matter,.or
Body, that there is not to be found the leat vacuity therein, The queion therefore is
onely,whether upon death the Soul can pas
from the Corps into ome orher place. Hen
riom Regius eems to arre her there by
that general law ofNature, termed the lan)
of Immutahilityz whereby every thing is
_
l
z7o
The Immortality
LIB. II.
the Body.
Thee
'
CAP. '5.
eftbeSoule.
'
271.
27 2.
'he Immartalzity
,LIB . II.
this
274
'he Immartalny
L 1 B .I l .
--*u-*-T17
'9 7v Pupil',
I'
a
'
ire,
yCAP. I 5.
V'
ofthe Soule.
27;
27 6
The Immortality
L iB'. II. X
'I
CAP. 15.
ofthe Soule.
I '277
'
'and
273
The Immortalizy
LrB. II.
Lo, this eect ,v that cannot but be loudly laughed at byxthem that think the Soule
rxlramhe thing hoe-[rive true; it being o &Vinc'ingan a'rgumim for teSWB Immor
tality. And he thinksthis Truth is evident
pfthe'perms
that meet
,L
a one
. 'anOther there
at
CAP. 1-5.
tyme Soule.
'
279
'
'
T4
mct
a8o
The Immortalitj
LIB . II,
alike' penetrable
to her, he
being
devoid of and
that paable
corporeall'propertyw
' so.theButSouctii'niay
all the' diculty
is to undertand
how
behluoned
from the . i
TCAP. 15.
ofthe Soule." *
28 r
re ea
.__ ':**!__,.c_. .
28 2
The Immortalitj
LlB. Ill
We might adde ex
i CAP. 15.
oftbeSoule.
2831
Soul hack againy virtue of that Mandam Sympatby I haveo often poke of! = I_2, 'Now of all Paions ivhatevegex
pas OFD-ere is tte for this more harm-_
"les
_ - power
Fancy
maybeing
carryatised
the Sd'uland
tO'the
pierce intended
-, 'and
re-v >
turned, may rekindl'e life in the Body to 'the
ame degree it had' 'before it was infeed
this"exees of Deire. This' is thanif any '
* '
= -
_C.,\ z
284
\ The Immortality
LlB. ll.
' (lade but that Art may bring into out own
Fower and ordering that which natural cau-.
es put upon us ometimes without our '
CAP. 15,
ofthe Soule.
285 \
'
dHan
28 6
The Immortaligr
LKBJL
CHAP. XVI
x. That Soul: departed commanicate Dreamr,
places.
CAPJG.
* a the ooute.
287
impreed
z_ 8 8
The Immartaltctty
LlB . II.
Of which kinde
in
(Iftbe-Swit'i
289
dered,
or ome'way
injured, or like,
have s-And"
ferne'
hid treaure-'to
dicover*,*-\6rithe
perons
are haunted
for the. like caues," 'as
= well
as houes-5
as:-Ieraizyuiawater-_th'eiriu'-2
them of-thezevent
'oFthe' greate
alauns-or?
_ \- their'
life; 1The".GhotX_-cts2
alo' of'Tdbceaed
beenaeruriheywhadlle-their
rrqzorred. to adhare- to
i Lovershavk:
their Parainours,
Bodies; =taking aillxoppontunities to mite:
'
f-
Iii,
-'
5'1'
'
.
,
19?
Uczlmdzfplig'
LIB. Il.
in. Fields fater great laughters Id Armies,
metzdrtirydeseaedzriends in o lively an .
Image; that theyalure them. and-embrace
LhLMTO the-thwerons; not knowi
gres-pirits
e'L-mderr;
' oulezfendzand
andzyetzimplies,
thatitheir.oft
'fames
* are o i
ronwas- to cenvere the: thick vaporous
aire'. ino Z_the compleat hape of their-abent
Wdzdewfedzacquaiqtande, and o tperfwade
them-eiyes than-they. ice them, and talk
with them, Whenas it is nOthing elebut
maie'ryxlmage
bythe.
powerf
their
'own Fa'nc Butvmade
certainly
it had
beenobetter
My to aye-denied: the. Narratino, then
to give-e ight and xenprobablez reaon of
thfbnvmm*
1"
:
.
4..That
CAP. 1 6.
o/ the Soule L'
39]
4. That the SPli'itnde of the-Aire in that
place'may contribute omething to the fre
quency othee Spectu, is rational] enough.
For it being more thick,it isxthe more eaily
reduced to a viible coniency: but mu be
ceae
29 2
He Immortality
L 1 B .'l I 1;
v'
i CAP. _16.
ofthe Soule.
,29;
neering, humour.
w -
394.
The Tmmartalitv-
LIB. Ii. _
ma his fate to die r, and indeed not long nfterthis mutual reolution) he was mind.
'CAL- 16.
ofthe Smite;
. 29; -
1!
296
The Immortalitj
LlB. II. ,
it-is, that thoe perons that are mo con
cerned, when itis in their power, hould act
v '
TGHA
CAil7.
oftheSa-de. *
_297
CHAP. XVII'.
'
'l
'
..titiototz
l
298
The IWUO'Tdlity
KL 13. II.
bAPJ 7.
ofthe Soule.
299
siqrs-"
_ _:
.-_..
4. Bctutct
3 oo
The Immortality
LiB. II. _
. uch
CAP,17.
o the Saide.
get . *
-.
--4
3 o3
'The Immortalzty
LIB . ll ..
.-
umes
HAP. 17.
a] we dame.
30;
ower.
zo4
The' Imniortality
LlBJI.
Creatures)tozemboldenfus'o condently to
adhere
r 7- This
to o
Poition
groundlesaContlhon;
mkesr'ndeeda plauible
=
'
really
x GAP'. 17.
ofthe ooaita
30;
houldbe A
creatures) in Ftheirai'ery
exactly like themelves in- their terrehziails
'v
\Z"-',
a'
.,
no
zog
The IMMortaliqy
LIB. II.
In
Vegetables
CAP. "7.
ofthe Soule.
'307
tiiLZiW I;
'308
A The Immortality
LiB.ll.
3.:
9. Which
Cn. 17.
ofthe Soule.
309
of the
Organs,
but of
the purer
rits
in Bodies
the fourth
Ve i tricle
ofthe
Brain,Spiz
he
acts as it were by h elf, and perorms
ome preludiom Exercies , conformable to
X 3
orc
31?
'The Inimonalitj
LIB . II.
' * 'i
' s -i 4
'
iFaxltS
CAP!
ofthe Soule.
31!
men
o univerally,
no O'bj'ects
in
Nature
anvering.ifthewene
toi'thee 'Faculties,ds I
have elewhere argued in-_t{ie ike caei Wi
'K
'um-'i
I
a'
\r '\
>_:_I: al
'
X4
Anwer
31z
The-Immortaliy
LIB. II.
-Aamer to another Objection. - 8. Another
Argument from the Fuioe of God. 9. An
t _:
** _ .
conz
CAB. 18.
of the-Soule.
3 i;
coniency, buc by what is more aeriall or'
Xthereall, the Vital! and Animal] Spirits;
>
--
as
3 1 4'
The Immwtahty
. L 13, II',
'
4 all?
YAPJ a.
O me oomc. '
3 5 5
hay'q eenthemo. prone to believe it. And thiznot onely out of a ene of their own
Igtez'e; z but' anyone thatever _h%d the hap
pines to experience thee things, may 0b7
=
z
I
I
'
'
9-9
3 '6
The Immortrzlity
LiB. II.
the Deity.
5. Again upon point of Juice, God
was engaged to contrive the Nature and'
Order ofthings o, that the Soules' of Men
i;
CAPJ 8.
a the Soule.
3 17
Rewatd, and
irre.
6.. Nor can-the
,
form, of this Argument
a.
z- l 8
The Immortalz'ry
LIB. II. i
&he. 1 i,
- of me dom.
3 39
an
, gzo '
The Immortah'ty
LiBJI.
is. perfectly and immutably ju, not doing
nor omitting any thing by changeable hu
mours, as it happens in vain Men, but ever
UAP. I 8.
V me oome.
32. l
oet-s.
repect
3 2. 2
'1 he lmmortaltty
LlB . ll.
For uppoe
CctAP. 18.
ofthe Soule.
32;
- epecially i it werenotlong*ofthemvelves,., r
3 24
ilbe'immonauty
LIB. II. *
that have atrue ene thereof, can as hardly deny this Concluon as the Exiten'ce of
the Deity, Nor can they ever be perwa-_
CAiPJ 8.
Otbe Gauls. - -
i; z;
devotion, has made them o' uch a nature, that' when they hope mo to enjoy himz
vile
uxsi; is ondy'- ppdportiomble to the hufthe reap: by'us-'PL- 'Which is jun'one 'at all.
v
"requiring a due'reentment
>
'i
7
BOOK:
326
Tbz-Jmmomzig"
'
..*
hang.
'n'ill-LA
3.;
9W#*W>N>-WYMMMMM$KFMU
(
'
--
. .
- -'
.\
>.
11'
TT
T') .v'.{t
WIFE
,
'
z
-* 'YV
xxirltb
'
the z/
ter'd -=
2.'
=.C:Ax10m{lztdl z-
Wild/3
. .=.':*<'iz'\z:.*(::- '.
* U
'
their
CAP. r.
otbe Soule.
'
3 37
,V
. " t.
Y 4-
338
The Immortality
LiBJII,
AXlOME XXVlL
<.
'
'
'
CAPi
qftheSoule. i .,
7 329
e;
cts, if they
ago
The Immortality .
LIB.'HL l
7 '
exceed
CAP. 1 .
a the Saith.
3; t
of
theeifthings,whichthey
cool'd' vto
nottheir'
'but
know,
they were
n0t thus hound
aid bodies. Foltthnn they were not enga-t
gegto move 'with- the whole coure of the'
E-< >':=-*"_ U'*B
E
**_HJa-._-Q'n
,'
.4-
-::I3 J_
Lad-p >
' ';
\
in," ..,.'
nll"
Alk.
LSL-'Di ;:="
..-,3.-3.-_';\,-'
'.ll_.
-'
;;:';'.\I
,,,.zz..._ql
-.
\,.'
,\)
AXP
5,._-i
3; z
772e ImOrtalit)
"' '
A x l 0 M E XXVIIL
Lrn. lll .
4.
ies,
A X I:
_ Why-le
V] l-IIU VUHZ'
AXIOME XXIX.
'Art
3 34.
'1 be Immortalzty
LiB . 111.
AXIOMBZ'XXX.
The Soal in her Aerial Vehicle is capable of
' ct
'
mer z
r'
Unb
I.'j
U]
IIID
UUn'L
and
3 3' 6
1 be mare-my-
LIB. 111.;
AXLOME XXXIl.
8.
CAP. r. i
a] the Soule.
szz7
earl-T
- 'A xi o m a X'xxm
i. The - [ne'er the _ Vehicle it. the more
-. qui-il:
;_:* and,
'
SML
'
'*
; .
-;-."1_ .. , xt-i.
'zr' . 'IZ
'* rLKJ-J
'
o,
338
The Immortality
L1B.III.
t;
b. 7
CAP. 1_.
of the Soule.
33 9
Soul is
in a' manner nothing 'Ele but lSpiiitSg'
zThe
Signatnreslaloz,of.sohe";1='atae
in the i
'Womb by thezDeiroaind. Imaginationrofi
the Mother, is ver erviceable for the eyini g
-:..-,.= a: ,
1 "i"
:'.'22?*
(r i
: 'l'.-*"'. '
Air i'OMlZZXXXV.
A'
.-.
>i>':\'
7
1.
3140.
'1 be Immortalztj
Lmll.
.. .*
.-
_ ;;
l'l-.Z ;
.'::(
*-'
I.
..
\_\_.--\.
.
l7\0-__
'r
'\
J
rll
A
4
."
.
'nl-
'
.'
-'\
'Qk
.-.' \
W.J.n
CAPJ.
oft-be Soule.
34.
7, That the Ve
'
34 2
The Immortalizy
Luz. lll'.
'
'
- '
'
v t IteriSnOt
hapematerial
.according._as
occaion
requires.
_to-deneiany
thing
in this .
CAP. 2; 'i
ofthe Soule.
343
t eyx
.
_
3. That which is more material, Ithink
is more eay to be dened, and that is, whe
ther the Soule be one Homogeneal Subance,
or whether it be in ome manner Heteroge
mal." That the latter is in ome meaure
true, is manie from what we have written
Lib. 2.Ca[. 11. viz. That the Pereepti-ue
veryrmuch
doubt Creatures
: For hencewouldrhavecta
it would ol
Llow
that ome
glim'mering- o Light all over, they being
ina manner allover tranparent -, and o '
z4
ome
344
Tbe-Immortality
LIB. Ill.
ofte',
' *
_.
Qjecti of Si ht as Well as of
" p'u-zlqd'Hem-hg, fand w. ac ochgr senes
T ._
i X 1.CA1>.'3..'
oftheSohlr; "
345i m
"
vertue
3 46
The Immartality
LlB. III.
.n_ature
CAP. 2.
of the Soule.
347
'
a,
348 \
The Immortality i
Lmlll.
'
'
eems
CAPJ."
349
w ere
U
z so
The Immortality
LiBJIL
. .
T-ZLY'CHAP. 111.
I, T/mtgbc natural abodexof the Soul after
cMtb-ILU/Mdin
2. Thkt/he-mnn'arquit
'
gruity
eld-17.;-
o the Soule.
35' t
-_ haite, rainicecg
1, .
; *
z:
..
i 'J
>
z53
\ The Immortality
Lm_ ]n_
con
CAP. 3.-
ofthe Soule;
' 35;
- ..'z
*;
.' .
. x-
[0
354. .
The Ymmortality
LmJH,
'bon
'
eire
C.AP-. 3 . '*
the Soule.
35;
'
conceonzo-Speech
qud-Reahn
to more
their?
i
"
A a z
=
356
The Immmczlitj
LlB .lll.
to
CAP. g.
Soule. '
357
Aa 3
, 'FhOG
' 3558
The Immortaiity
LIB'. Ill .
'ir 'KFFI _
CAP.;.-
ofthe Soule.
359
300
1pczlmmortaltt)w
law-[m
nue. Woe-MAN
if.
Mzmxchtefewzghzm the
in KING-3'
qaymher Man-es
xfthLY: fill-i, am We
45 w
kel
Cum-3 .*
\ of the Soul',
36;
likely, but Lint. the impair-es
wander
'Fine-ye alo 5 Whough-I have taken all this
tricks doe
'
,F
36:
out
CAP. 3.
oft/Je Soule.
36;
364.
Tbe Immortality
LIB. ill. X
canbe
incommdated
orins
Winde,
Andyet
Rain, Haile, nowi
ando'Thunder
will mcommodate her till. les. For they
pas as they doe through ' other parts of
the Aire, which cloe again immediately,
2: a .
,->1'4'
"3 ,'M
**
P-'J'U
"-l'
*'
'
an. .
CAP.4, *
ofthe' Soule.
36 5
and
eparateand
Soals
hear itandfte
a va
Dime:
'theme
is thatat though
they mayt
366
The Immortality
- L13.ll[. i
CAP.4. .
'ofthe Soule.
367
.v
'
'
'ena e
36 3
The Immartalit)
Luz .IIIL
enable them tohape themelves Organs for'
the receiving' of Sound', of 'greater- art and
CAP. 4;
ofthe Soule.
oziy
malsz-forzthedeutx takirnjziwthe-Smvidila
* B b
.
[0
ig'bzqo
The Immrtalzty
LIB: Ill.
WbrC(0.,tHh-Beii arenvurihcdrby
grewi in
Capacity. tov'ifcbxhmunkard
Wh
hem,bend:
ji nWhich-Lthings
ithey? v could
bC _-iWcd,-Fac*.mu1drbe>m{ uch hard
Problem: cqneerning, x*'1F3,m3a510fVzitze
*
r': al
'
c es,
ct _ Ell-4.,
qftbe Sattin' _
37:
-:M.o:on
Lthkir iVjc'W-'athanWoe;
..:-,-1=heynbe
&U-13?
-.035{Y.the>k&6\1{9@;3!d
ame
To
iz '31
' , I
-,zi:*;F'-*."T?ftz;
Where isa-nothing. that
,QBIOY J" jfhey
'large
Myzhavej
andiirvimuz'Woodsz
their ets out A:
plcaantG3fdc:!1$>
its' 4 fail'
37 z
The 'Im'tuliqy
L m-JII.
'Till
GQWKWQQYSBBWFPFhSY-Wqc-accted
elves when: ey-wdi'el'in EB'OHY; chem
i _
'<'<:_=* Bln tlefg ,whadeveriswnuzomead
.._.=._'_'.'N'\*'_'.;:477;;.L.
*-
I
a
'
\
*-ct19_u4
4..
..*.-
-v
gift/Je Soule-2
QAP. 4.;
37;
. Arm'rmwfmmewiyti'zz
grain-(Maid
an cum mean-s
.T'
l = ;;-,-;
'
'
Bb 3
, _____,_\_t__9
. 374
The Immqrtality
LIB.III.
thus by
eparate-'tate
Dthus',
as' has
b'een
aidtheir
already;*ifs
they be'a-lo
Iempctters
to evil, they vvill very little dier, from
L *
'
-"_
'__
1. t-
'
CAP.4-.- -.
375.
as ueles. Thee hort intimations are u- cient to make us underand that theGem'z"
hb4
eHAn
The Immortalie)
J'ai',
(Lia-i , =
LIABJUV 1
*
.\
'Pjwmrer
A: '-_
"nrr
'3. - " . 'l'
,4 . .
i
1' '
ad Genii.vwereinigihk
the'may
t athe-vi
with
ithe
3i,*'Ho'- the Genii
.j'hIe-1me t' nother, though they he to no'
bind/ible, 4.' d their approache: , and of'
"J*.i..ct
'One-5.
3772'
A
[a
A.,
7,
,f,
I!
>
A.
'
* YFF
z7gk
The Immartality
LZBJIL i
[a
'i (High ,
. ofthe Soulezr
;7"9z
4_ L),.-_> -r_.
'3 80
The [Wort-it)
LI,_s..--l,ll.=
ltV. -
that
54 v
' t. O,
(Irn-55]
'ofthe Soule. y- i
38 x
s- ugtoz them
ches-on] , '
qur it'y
LIB. III.
hare viildl 'to her fellWGenii, t'though keeping? -_ yct- -' this imple: Orbicular? forth.
But' whatodvere 'there canbefbetwim tvr'rb
CAPL 5._
of the-Soule.
'
38
of
tctrerial
noble form
and '
hapes
whichAniifialr't
thddghi it ebeirhuch
obuted
&Sin-'La
'one'a'not-he'r in-Hrim'anehape
lea the ;:.,rz
bet
'
.i) 21.;" A,
' ter=lhrt>of.them-_=.r.z'
1.l
v
..
is,
3 84
The Immortalzitj
LlBJIL
__\- _ -
_, - *
m.v . .Not
C-AP. 5;
of the Soule.
F38f5
X 10 - no pufpde';"Wh{ch-fhctefofe, Pxo'viUene'q
z foor4ainjn'g,-Mn'be re-thnchisazaiyig,
Hams
. . ,
UCc
can
3 85
The Immomtzty 2
Lnmll.
egg move the parts of- our Body met-ply: by
qur:Will and , Imagination. v 'And . that the
pgwgxzzcknpwlgdgedjin Imaginqq
'all
Phpphcrz,"; nothing would *
morez
pleae-3 >
.-
_d not be o'
Ci>.6.
0ftbe80uk.'- -
387
z -. 43. *.' :
__
.'
w', z.
A.
_,
-z
LA
..'
'
j * -. f.
xuv- s
"
'-
. ,,
* ' J'
,. I.b_H.AP_
'
Cc 2.
"
,um
* 3 as.
The Immomhgy
LIB..LH. - '
-.5wnerm5.
m. 17? 8.
_-_*._){z=;-i').'_.. ,1
t;
.-.
:._',
.' .'
u'ch things
" .
.\
'ning
'
'
1
'
Cc 3 .
Of
7 3 90
The Immortality z'LnL 11\,.
or educed by the Force Ofth'e Mothers 'Pan
cyz o'the Eormative virtue in Soulsie
* 1 '- 'ie
' '
Wi.
)A1-.6.
t oft/ye Soule. -
39,
like
Damon.
As that ofthe
Ha ryot irl'epdrof
Marcus 'Damacene
J; that
er out Of
Guilielmnrv Paradinns, Of a Child Whoe
skin and nails reembled thoe of al Bear-3'
and a third out of Baldui'zm Roncm,'o'fon'e"
born with man' excrecencies coloured and
"
(2 c 4
man;
3 93
'1 he rmmpmzny -
puta, _
ripe <zprgcationzofthsix
maz-aent
. to
el-znctuBun'he-crupl-es'
f ivins' Pehexs,lwhich yet are a lented xo byFV'y .
7 learned writers,
thgtof Blackzmoores
b_'
_Lhorn'9f
white Parents
53 airm
ofbhcksbytbs
expoed,-and'white
ofpicturcs
hsabasdszthrse ..wpr<l.,wf1iich
in? Wife whcehewas
bigzwirhazdraw
he directed
towards- her: Forehead, , . ,Whiqh] will. no;
'I
'St
"
_'
ing
- Of heSultL
39;
I,
_ '
'
'
to,
i? 94
'The Immortality
LlB. lIl.
'dipute here;
= - ,
=' * '
r 7, .lfthee' Stories' herecites be true,"'as I
_ mu conbi's I doe not Well -know-'how- to
deny them, ' he reporting them With'O ho
ne
andfcredibl'e
circumancesoflinagiaia
z they are
notable
ekarn' ies 0thep6wer
simz-andxuc >as doe-not- onely win'beli'ef
I, 6
ZA-P.'6_J
ofthe Soule. t
395. r
ttionally be acknowledged to have a hand, l- the eorrnation of all, vital Beings in th'._
t e
396
TZe Immoitality
LIB.'[IL
,a
391..
>exactly
wondetz'i'f'thoeChickens
t e ame. =Whcnterit
abate-menti
ted-with
heads
benched
i. hundredI-Inwks
>milesfdiamrzftsctxh
Hey,
hole Imaginatien was diurbed inclin'd
T Conception 2' becme
Soul euhe
'odd hadbegun a rude -dtaught,-. which it
_-.
t),
cnAn'
JJU
1 bctwullty
'. Y-ssvnjzr'ereq
ems'l ezz E'ixl ,i.LIB.-HH
izl- 71' e-Ta
sviz.
.*-3:I;:-.-. A)
en', o s: ctguulzvz-Hhz 3.: 4) _ IL-V-' -
nen/ma Me T IZAQHPLZZFYMSYMMrHS
>injczzed$jenue : , ' and; jet-'fdr
I: WMmip-ik, 45' &wilt-t' 'cur deig,
bnts? Chmky'und- that'
Licetus
:JZJH'YA?
. in' 'G'ML-l Hiddrehrewddrgmctms
'the
niotib t e Wbd but: Hide-withall- "Eu
31' Mint: z wfzat'b : Animulrftdndr
'
oatignatmcout
pWJZ'ZlZ Example
dfxKi'rcherkului
='of_a mevmctddd
>md> hit
zsjndgknonztbtrwpmz Iliv; Whether 'Eve-i
ample out of him
a Child with-Eva)
*cl{_nii:g\17i.un<* ' atiw'ufphr bia been
22 ,tlnzrlieetnsz
bit/dih:tak-the
t'maemingwhisiz'w'wzj
zmzkguztidn bf't.:- F
I
&lain-ry Yclzielesfo' .- eparate. LSouls-em'i 'Dew X
* hr'i. i
up.
3AP..7.
ofthe Soule.
399)
4W
1-be1mmortalzty
, LLB'JIIW
ZAP. 73
ofthe Soule.
40 r
Helmont: Cherry he o of
ponthe
Matter,
theSoul
ameo(rit-gum
ances; ame
Fori'the
Rootinand
every
egetahle is the s .ir_it_0f Nature; in vir-
Dd
Ima
goz
The Immwtality
LlB. Ill;
image oher-Minde.
a -
or i -
-'
e1
cip.7.
We Soules .
as}**
D d 2.
--
that
404.
The Immortalzy
' LIB.]II.
rinted
Child he bore.
CAP. 7.
0tbe Soule.
405
. 7
Dd 3
8, All
* 4;06-\ .
The Immortality
LJKJH.
'
A Pt
CAP. 8.
ofthe Soule.
407
C H A P. Vlll.
Pellus
a e, [hall re
one
5; which
I _ aye'inalready
dev.
nedwith
to beanother
Huctmene,
epecial]
the better
ort of Spirits. And-as for the wor kind,
438
TheImmortality i _ LIB.III.
as
eay a 'matter
is itlfor
loWet
Gem'i to
reemblect
the'hapes
of thee
all thee
jCreatures,
in which they alo appear viibly oftentitnes
to them that entertainrthenand ometimes
CAP.8.
o the Soule.
- 409
- '
'
'
PBTF
4to
The Immortality LrBJII.
pure aire, were it elf'u'nmixt with. other
Matter) but the feculency o thoe parts
that it abrades and converts into fewel, and
ermor ,leer,-according
to the
agrees
of
'
i
I
Ie'tne
. CAP,.8,.
of the Soule.
4' I
4I z
The 'Immortalitj
LlB. Ill.
- gures
as are een here below,
and' reflexie
yet no
ct*
*
> CAP.8,
ofthe Saide.
4' 3
And-it is
very
L lB .HI.
e/Ema hould
5. A conr
Cnn. 9.
ofthe Soule.
41 5
'
1. Vvdened
E haveinnow
enoutheh
whataccuratel
form cry-'garb
aerial Genii convere with one anorher. It
remains we conider how they mutually en
tertain one another in pang away the time;
Which is obvious enou h to conceive, to
uc
-T<e1mu>m
416
The I'mmortalzity
'LiB eIIl.
'C-Alazpl
oft/2: S0ule.**'
417
i.
'
Ee
wards
418
The Immortelzty
Lust 'In
elves. 'better
for. 'a good:
of time I
after.
. ,
' pace
.
at; Wherefore there be other entertain
menes,lwhich though they be of an inferiour
, in:
* -
U'SML
QAp.9.
A'tbe Soule,
4'
'3
"E'O', 33" 'uhaima, Et JV tWyG- Wed; WHEN'
EWPat'Z-ns Wheiaw m93FAn9Vy4 3 i
iAGgdt-w &pa-'TT rSPJ-H'Vj dyen' iEZ-iv Zdm _1,
i'
"det ring?
j- F . _
'
e 2
'
Pl
42.:
The' Immartality
Lr'tn .IlI-.'
Fancy
cconul'ts i With.
thatandi'trttn,
,ErizExemplaraof
BeautyJnte/lectudl
Low
and the
Body iswhollyobedient tO-th-d imagination
oft e M'indez -and_ will tO' eV-tn'y Punctilio
a 7- an.
tern z
Cut-44
cftlxSaule.
43:
' '
Ee 3 -
Satjres,
_ Air
The -Immortality LIB. Ill.
21' -,- the
amuse;fndh mre'- ' Am;
_'_s ' ' iS'; 'bo
mmdy'dcpettggymso
. may;
neourek-andrk
into' dicuxous' - gamratiensg
dilutes s?
'
mnoeueusxwvewdfw
nerates 'into the' man bruri'hueud ' ubga
mimble obeenity
KW imhe higheriandimere pure Dream doe in their Region-3? o' their Feuhf
no',
bd pervert-ed: reemblances of. I: _'60_thers
'
* \ Yortjqq
ng't'heydoe
efux?"vitail-7'
Me actuate
thatthey- drive ow'
CAP-Qc \
.- "t/79 Soule.
42;
' With
them, whichconceive,
isaf ac' t'a'ine extent,
it
13 mo-nagural-te
pqrtly-bcty
lqcaLmet-mW-and partly b the ctivitji of
their. thoughts, they let dine' particlesck
felr-Vehicle'a into a more then uual agim
tion r which being thus moved, catncr'an'd
rptrc 5 -=and that o the Vehicle lek'ehs'm
omevmcaltewad. therefore admits ofi
regard alo.
- -. - -,
"
EC 4
Aire
424.
The 'Immartaluy
LIB. Ill.
aAire ismou'lded _ into thetlformdjdzcbnju
-_ency-,51t2i5 bety- - ard<to conceivezwhether
'it be done by? themeeri ' er- of Imaginat
'tion n nv'their own vehrcles',r jdabl'ed-in
ome ' iditieis that are-'the itte farthe
Wihes-5. butiri
fpchitmalltew'artheFERMEUt'th'ey-Yhrelim 'is
-CAP' 90
Soule."
35
ibws-ch'ektrdnparehcy otTt-heevPlaxits-'may
adde-a Particular' make, a's we ee' it is in was
z\.w_hit:h deiibk'
may-trace
;,.'=.',
t my
'4z6
The IMOrtality
she
LJBV Ill- \
aMthvatyiagtof-theirwaomsznerfect [Bil-3 X
sal-hgrmomyzhey would-d9e.very_kmd1y 1
tphriag uszmrdzback of the'ccrtamty. a x
> thee-things; *a!1d*m3kB-u\hi$t more then a. *
-.
BOdYaOPiP-HW mipm':
or:
-\-'-
..*"7'
"9
gyTv'
*.
it .-;. '3
fcutes_could ever-intreat up
ouatth ; a
, * -: 10) a
t .. ,_-.;.-..* _
'
.
-LL
H-'j
'i
i'
. ,
1 .;'-'"
'
\ "
.
" '
4 1 3;
'3
'*
Warm
2; 3 8
The Immortality
LJ BL'Hl.
l ell'
CLPA o',
of the Soule;
4 39
4 Zo
The Imnartblily
L 18.: In;
dividedzinw Natiems anelzPIWZMCS, glad to
have, tbeixoicets of Staecgromjhe-Kiag
* on 'his (Throne-'nto Lhcvcry ldwe and-mail
abhorrcd-Exedntibners ofJuioe.- "; -
.. .
dating
LIAP. 1 o.
o] me oouu-
43]
nal
43 2
The Imm'ortalitj
- LuulII.
.,-'_- -
theezrcvil-Spirlts de
QdFSe
Andtvcral-'dlhce
Qonideratlilons
vz
i
t ere
CAP. '0.
ofthe Soule.
-L_-
A"
enough df 'this-Subject
already; --=>see
' '4 ' *i*
93' -
COHJJJNTJ'S.
Prioru'
or
434'
Tbelmmor'tatzty,
LIBJII.
-, * ._
C H A P.
435
CHAR xn'
1-. Three thing: to he conidered before' m
come to the moral condition of the Soal af
12. 'That
The llmmortaiigr
LIB .Ill.. ;
uFO-'R
m'z
i; '11
nimble
Carp-tri.
oftheSoule. 3
4;
nimbie'to 'excue or accne-her-'aceor ding.
hdxdslxnc, _1 -;_\u:_'n;c=-: fivi '20 not'
'th
e_poWer of th'ejParenUS'Imtigiiiatioliintik
ad: 'Of Conception, or Geitation',>yet) may return more-'hear to its" peculiait- emblilnee
\afterwards,andh be an' uneonecalable Nde
i 3..
Ihdiwidwatnj."
We will addei?to] all=! this', the"
'i _ ' REtaTi'n'
=
'ment Of the ame Name whichihe 'deceaed
*-
438
The *1mm0rtality
LIB.. Ill.
o
they.
are veryronvenient'
for:Order
adminira
tioni
of Juice,
and keeping ofdu the
(WhCR'Sta-(C-T" fix! '*-;..7;
4;xTheeo-tbingsxhereore premied, it
Will nombe hardxo- conceive how the con.
Eareh,
'z'
'
gctxozxsz ,j
CAPJ r.
oft/ye Soule.
i'
439
It-i
4497. U 'Human-di)
LIB- I-H.
eonv
WRBk-
Y'PPW
ogreat. injury
again
i
' . i '
' \
t Cll'
CAP. 1 1..
of 'be Soule.
44 t
'gondemned
"4'4 z
The Immortality
LIB. Ill.
A),
'
CAP, 11..
of the Soule. .
44;
'
power;
444
The Immortaligy
LIB. Ill,
p owerito avoid, and looks more 'likeza pu
nihmentzthcnva fault e though 'it-be 'neither
to thoev that arcwQll-n'waning and-Con
ciencious , and not: profeed contemers
- *
Ad amend wireuvct A ,,
_
Farttmatorum nemorum, e_dcj-hutm,
Which Truth I could not'concedl,it' being a
great prejudice to Diwixtvfrwilcmt '""t0
think \ otherwie. - For .-:.to 1thoe-tha't' 'axe
free, her wayes will ecm'as unin'telli'gible
at all.
.
-. 8; 'Lcc oheneenhereforezbe petuliayTl'iYi
ledges of Morality, everywhere, to' 'thoe
that pas' into the other' Stace,- For unles
God make a oz'aon pmpol'git will- nim
rally follow ,'"t t Me'moxY-K awfyDeat-h
fugge'ma nothing but What? cheConYcience
allow$ olinluchTranquillitY ofdoinde mu
' Compa'qy
CAP. wi
ofthe Soule-
44.;
' 446
The Immortolig'
LIB; Ill.
deeply
in uch Caues
asGod
in the World,
and areiju
andwill
ho y aint'ain
at the
b'ortome, (and there' are ome: Principles
that-are indipenably uch, which Provi
portion
UAP. I 1..
o] me oouu.
447
448
1 be human-tary
LIB 411.- *
>
as'- bein-g
vUis-a'n-'error-l- a '
v'-
be things. a
2. Expe
1, V
Gg
eluded
45o
' The Immortality
L 1 B .Il I?
eluded Aertion of the Souls Immortality.
nt:
CA'P. 121
. ofthe Soule:
45:
G g 2i
mate'
4532.-
The Immoritality
LLBJIL
1- '.
out
CAP. xz.
ofthe Soule.
45;
our endingany particles to the Matter it
does thus act upon; as my thoughtomo'
ving o my Toe being repreented within
would
bewarm
enouoh
their journeyalo
in
,the Summer
Sun.
_1"ihe by
inammations
o the Ccmes Udder by the boyling over of
the milk into the re, the calding omens
->
Gg 3
excret
4594.
7
The Immortaluy
. LIB.' Ill;
To an
pauminnoAtoms. . * '
.
T
rag, The ngtzble examples of this Me'
_ if I
. _
S'MQ
CAP. 1 z.
Off/76 Soule.
455
falls
them
in thee
Arnl
bodies,as
the Part
cetam
love
to call
them,
the ame
is ini
.:
Gg 4
lates
Liu.lll.
C-AP. 1 z.
457
;.
'
' '
i?
i4.'5'8
The Immartality
ct i Mr PhiMQPM- - .
\
.
_ o
..,4- 3. . ;,.,,_.<,,_.
LL
a.
'.
-; , .
y ,J"'-,
..
"4
'J*r-4
r'
'
h-o
{._..A.n.
,_.
VI
'
._
.
>
'
n.,
J
-.
r
'
un
K
ALL
-._
-vx
Xllx,
>
..n.-\,-..
,I '12
.
.
v,
>
'
'
'
_
'and
';'-.
..
4\
v
,l- .qz.
- . _.
1
A:
.-.. .l.
'
5, A14
CAP. '3.
qtbeSoule.
-459
t e 'ermtbere 5. In aholute De
' m ration that Gnwity unneth: the' of.
fect _of mer Mechanical powers. 7.. The
' Law-'de
my large
Wire"
bounded.
or:- 8Nature,
j'Tln reaon;v
'f it: and
name)
9. In
gaud
'rrs
'
lndicremlyz-a'ccoxdieg
I? tils-We' wyseh'
*
i '
i
460
The Immortdliy
LlB. Ill.
For 'the
' '
A to,
CAP. 1 3,
ofthe Soule.
451
A to B , though
the receion of
qhe'mhereal Mat
ter mu needs be
from C to A ac
. 3. -.'i 3
* _ .c0rdin0 to this
Hypotheis.
.
a perpendicu
'
int e
46'2;
The Immortalit)
LlBJlI.
A
.*4]
..
.11
iui-'Q'itheline
the lineHct FE_-,_
which,._-ay
IJL decline:
frbm
drawn
erpendicular.
to
_ctthe_Horizon*L,K two third' parts ofa right
ahglc, that is to ay, 6_o._idcgrees. For the
mote
CAP:.r z.
a the soule.
46;
464.
The Immartalzty
Lin .III. *
from what has been above demonrated,
.3
'
6. Adde
CAP. r 3.
otbe Soul',
465
6. Adde unto all this, thati the morion
__of gros Bodies were according to meet
,.'J)*. ,
466
'1 be Immortam)
LIB. lll.
.ct
\
I-
all
CAP. 13.
0cbc Soule;- - 3.
gdg
'
- "
H = z'
is
468
He immortality
LxnJll.
CAPctct. 13.
cftbe Soule.
469
The. Immortaiiy
LABJIL
ledgezmtyawle 'according to her rank
_ and rmntit- whenever he leaves, the Bodys
And Wouldprove a very erviceable Hypo
thcntzr. thoe then fancy the praexience
of: humane SQula-iode'larc how they may
beggnvgnzhed into, Bodies hcregbe the as
, '
i
.f
'(.-..,
.
_..
.
_
'_
\._=t 4
I.
> .
'un
'
lax.'
'A-
"lo'iot'j.-,J.H\
CHAP
L-ZJI\'..c.,q
\A
(,
,
I
'
'-.1
__H.
'
,k
'
'
V" ib
3--
'7
47 l
'1. .**
CHAP. XIV.iJi{' ,_
'
H 1.
-j
*"
'I'
1,ASonthe
zObjectio'ns that-'are uually
.ct' - i madeagahi;TtheYImmm-tality
ofthe
' Soule; 'to
i. zi
. tedious
47;
T The Immttrtohty ,_Lnz. Ill.
...tedious and ueles, there being carce above
one in twentythat can appear of any mo
ment to but an' 'indierent Wit and Judg
CAP. '4.
of the Soule.
47;
'bag-74
The Immortality
LIBJIL
his
CAP, z 4_
v475
'
'
ee
476
The Immartali
Lus. Ill.
waies.
t.
7- As for theDebility of her Intellectpals
*
in
CAP. 14.
477
_cz
recovery
47 3
The Bnmortality
>LlB@ Ill.
The!" inter
;-.i Jl
:l 323.
- a."zo_1 eAnd
CAP. 1 4.
of ibe Soule.
479
admdnition of
..
_ '.
480
LXBJUC]
Matter
CAP. 1
ofthe Soule.
481
CHAP. xv.
I. An Anwer to the cxpm'me't ofthe Sco
. lopendra cut into iem. 2; And rath:
ying of an headZeIE-tgle over a ham, 45
* alo to that ofthe Maltfactow: headhitc
Son Fi
48;
Then'mmahty
LtB.iIl.
nto-1.' Martdltity. 8. Ofthe Trugiul Pompe
3
;NOR
doe thoe
Inances
in theecond
- ct Objection
prove
an thingto
the con
trary, asifthe Soule it elf were really di
viible; The mo forcible Example is that
ofthe Scalopcndra, the motionof the divi
hado
CAP_. t 5.
ofthe Soule.
483,
t e
484.
The immortality
L 1 B . lll .
CAP. 15.
aftbe Soule.
48;
a man, was but one peron. Which he con
ceives appears the plainer, in that borh the
heads profeed their aareement per etually
to the ame actions,in that they had t e ame
ap etite, the ame hunger and thir, poke
ali e, had the ame deire to lye with their
play Yov
con'
(as
'The Immorta'lity
Llnzlll.
tiat
CAPJ 5.
aft/ne Soule.
437
perem
"Ass
The Immortalicy
LIB. Ill.
peremptory concluions are nothing but the
impOures vo Melancholy, or ome Other
dull and ulome diempers o blood that
corrupt the, Imagination; but that Fancy
mockery,
yetherareCaptivity
a real diquiet
'go her
'minde in this
andlmprion
nient. Which condition o hers is' lively
'et out by that incomparablc Poet and Pla
matter.
Seminim
z quantii non nam'd corpom tardant,
Terrmiqz bebetant artus,moribnndztqzmcmraz
Him met'mm,qpizimqne,dolent,gaud5ntquc,
-
(me aurm
aware mea.
To
CAP. 15.
of the Soule.
489
To this ene,
A
e
w'
our
an a'
heaven]
oarce
I: fn?hefegeea{ram
ojfar
the day/re:
Of noxious Bodies oes not them retard,
In hea-vy earth and dying limhs imhar'd.
490
The Immortality _
LlB.III.
,9? Th?
CAP. 13.
of the Soule; 7
49 1
C HAP. XVI.
1. That that which we properly are is' hoth
49:
The Immortality
Luz. Ill.-1
CAPJG.
of the Soule.
49;
- _ . .
there,
( (fer
4 '
- 494.
The Immartab'ty
LIB.!IL
CAPJ 6.
ofthe Soule;
49;
perceive
496
The Immortaliry
LtBJII.
- .
- _
CAP. 16.
ofthe Soule. i
497
conied mainly: in this, =d0es>neceiarily
perih in death. ' This oeistainly is-thu'tf- (if
they
Libertin'es
know Would?
their own
haveg
meaning)
who' 'arelaaiilatb
which
themelves
theothetf-Worid,uot
i meet
eactr they
hould in
quarrtlr
with themelves there for their) tranfactionsin this'. And-it
I to helter--_thc\n>'andecn're- themaftomrzhe
ad after-clapsTthey may Juiy upect-'inthe
to
other
conesr'thatlthey
life; 5 Flio'trr,havev
itis neoelary
in this liFQ'asPaq-L
for:
ticular and proper Teneno'ormemzof
Meaure, ol-Pc'ace; and Pahgs. of Gohci'
ence, and of'other-ir'impons, as i. May
had an' individual'v'Sou-l of, 'their own diinct
tracts
49 8
The Ymmortahtj
Lia-ma
CAP.16.
ofthe Soule.
499
inuateinto'all living Creatures. So that
the Soul of the WOrld willube necearily
that actuates every Animal upon Earth. . 8.- That othLreonceirpfour Souls being
a Vital Rd]
goe *
The Immojrtalitju
Lia-Ill;
gain'
manythey
Rhymofkh'e
by- this, whenas
Soule the
thee
,World,
ayed-may;
beas capable; of all the_ everal congruiti'es'
of'life,-as-the.Soul is in that ene we have
decribedzc'izaod therefore Peromljty', Me.
-r ,. .=.
one.
CAP.'6.
oftheSouIu
50.!
But:
from
502
The Immortality
iLiB. Ill.
z-
139.?
CAPJ 7.
ofthe Soule.
50;
C H A P. XVII.
50-4 '
.
*\*'\
t"
Tl lzmorgalixy
_LIB'_][L
=\
"4' , ,
the: Ftmqf
_, non'. amgnibjng
8-. -,T1Wte'
(gin-'mony
.,\_4t3r_czh,
'thgDeath-of'atthe'fPl-nr
great
'jr (God Pan. '9. Tbg third wdzla- afHe-iod,
TfkF-i M-rNit-'Wl'
best/'e [w-ta'
'
3." 'J .
t e
GAPJ 7,
ofthe Soule.
5 05
_; tjethierezl Vehicle inantly: Soule in.
- a condition ofperfect Immor'ality; -1 7.T}u:
then is no internal impediment to tbo'
that are Hemically good, but that they
'my abttain an' everlaing bappine after
Did' .
1.
'*
'
' magency
506
777: Immortahty
LIB. III.
manencyinlie in the other-World, (it im
plying no contradiction, That her Vital
Congruity,v appropriate to this or' that Ele
ment, may either of it elf ex ire, or that
he may by ome carelenes ebilitate one
Congmity , and awaken another , m ome
meaure, and o make her elf obnoxious
to Fatez) we cannot but think it in a manner
main
are alledgedxfor
it, .;Th'e,
ViionTeimonies
offacim Cardamari,
drelDeath-lof
I O
CAP. 1 7.
of the Soule.
507
asked
508 '
TheImmortalitJ
_L13._HL
hge
men are the traimrez-'t vof the he/l'ort
qfDogs, That the tenuity afltheir Bodiexna
* eth, thatthey me: deems; neither good no'
'
\ \..:\
-'-'\'-.
CzAP. 17;
of 'be Saule.-
509
5 'o
The ImmOrtah'ty
o them drinhi
LlB. Ill:
r 5' Y- 'a
t 011
gun-7.
o] me come.
51;
vthe mortaiity of the Damont, and th eve-c ral ranks which He/iod mentions of Rational.
Beings, viz. Sea), deciions, Fire-m, and do's-9 me'
' "
Par'adoxes.
As
5 12
The Immareality
LlB.-IH.
- c e \'.='l-'
- "a,
Secoddlyzat
tbexAerid-Geniiliw-ht
About'
369.', can; which
is again HeadUnctd
Tlnt Mr
Smlsme
o tofarre
imo'
tal,Thirdly,
a that tbiare'is
not-bingpraex
'a ran-aid'
ning aftexdmt. _.,'-I r; 2
"n't -'
v;
'
Fourthly,
CAP. 17.
ofthe Soule.
51;
Ll
which
5 l 4.
The lmmortality
Lia . 111.
>
is
ofthe doule.
5 15
'
'Ll 2'
gave
51 6
The Immortdlity
,LLBJII.
an
CAP. 17.
ofthe Soule.
5 17
1 e.
12. This is one Hypotheis conient
enough with the veracity o thee Daemons,
but there is alo anocher, not at all impo
tble, viz. That the Vehicles o the Souls
for
's i 8
The immortality
LIB.]Il.
SouleOther
of the
World repreents
herhow
elf
and
Spectatouris
, when, toand
long a time he pleaes, and the vaporous
reliques othe dead body adminier occa
ion._ Now that the Vehicles of the Souls
o men departed this life, after. they are
come to a etled condition, may be farre
thinner and more inviible then thoe of the
i. Q '
CAP. 17.
ofthe Soule.
5 '9
520 .
Ihemmortalzty
- LIB. Ill.
regardI
ii more' t in this
.- Whither
CAP. '7.
of the Soule.
52 1
7rzm, 7raM0tim;
'
Acrid
5 2z
Thelmmortalitj
LiB . Ill.
CAP.17_
ofthe Soule.
52;
may
5 24.
The Immortality
LiB. III. i
C H A P. XVIII.
Fire.
'
"
painful
CAPJ 8.
a the Soule.
52.;
5. 26
The lmmortalitj
LIB. Ill.
and
o ethad
all.imOr-e
on re.
and
Far-arms
wit, ButjPodonitlf
who did not hold'
that
dnwdgqui Show* 'which
theftczthet
:
'
' Stoicks
CAPJ 8.
of 'be Soule.
527
Stoicks did; For the deroying of the ed
tbereal Regions by Fire is as foolih a fan-v
c as the entencing of the Eele to be
diown'd, becaue the matter of the aft/le"
is too ne and ubtile for Fire to rage in,
it being indeed nOthin but a pure light or
re it elf, And yet t is aft/meal Matter
is innitely' the greate portion of the
them.
4. This Conagration therefore that
Pbiloopbers, Poets, Sibyls, and all have ll'd
5225
'lbe lmmartahty
LiBJll, 'I
CAP'. 18.
'ofthe Soule.
'529
h-lphureous ames.
' - v _
. : (17
'are theNYmphs,to w
Mm'
'*
A?
r. 5 To
The Ymmortalzty
LrBJIP.
5*_17;
zf 'it Ka-i
,' But
'In-'goes
to: leave And
thee
g 7ra'aea-'mp'hem
Roetical
WAadye'm'u-t
Riddles,
'_
, -;
c. __
i:
CAP. i 8.
ctbe soule.
53'
_. Mm a' _
olu
'5 2
The 'Immortaiity
L I B . Iilf
elarion of the 'Souls-or Spirits o Wicked
me and Dam'ts- from their Vehicles, That
'eablih
i - r 1;'\Th'e
thisla
Opinibu
therefore,
upon..\
to make all ure,
thatthere ma be no inconvenience in ad'
'taining-that the Soals or spirits as well of
CAP'. 13,
ofthe Soule.
53;
5 34
'The Immonolity
LlB, _I'll.
ghe'i'rlong-eepg' .
'- , -
CAP. 1 8.
o/ the Soule.
535
5zo
4. m' Jmmwmmy
L'IB. m,
quoque
,,
'
' foctum,
Mrerropt-r entel ezlrn it retinentin nori.3
Judgment.
. , .,
r.
15, Allthat we can be aured-ofis, that
thoe Soul: that have obtained their 'inthe-m!
.t e
CA. tal.
oftheSakde. '_ -
gz
- '
' \ ,
nothing
'1 be lmmortalzty
Lm. Ill.
.,-
'
CHAP.)LlX.
,z
CAP. 1 9.
a the Soule.
5' 39
' of' this Extinction 'upon Man and Beat,
and all theaerial Daemons imprion'd with
'
AmUeiwms,
having
.54o
Fzelmmortality
'
LlB.IH.
* -
'
t le
CAP.19.
a the Soule.
54:
2342
e'Im'nm-alig'
Lent Ill.
to dimal- alightg let mrlace it. upon a 't'noie
thopeful-Object'z and conider the' condition '
of thoe Svuls'
thatand
have
'Arrived
"unbind
Vehicle,"
ee jhowi
at'.to.their
this fate
tanftake'hold of'themctAndofit
plain of
at
i'r'ight,1d<mctheYiardxdut
theIs,r-each
Tthisitniyidnngeon, as being already mount
'bell into thel-6cur'e manonsao'f the purer
,mbe Tlwe'wor, thatcanl be vimagined of
them-is,
'that'on'tethingzrlikethey maylndethemelvesin
a condition'
that i'of' Ours
CAP.19.
- ofthe Soule.
54;
. mTbeunderooctdb
BntI anwer, that that
o Ham'
is chiey
the Aerial
TDnmm,
no:
the e/Ed'ereal mities, who can turn'themv
544.
The Im'nmmlitj
LrsJII.
the = Aerial;
nmztltee.centralLuminaries
ofthe-Fati
me conentlwith tl'eper'fecte -h * [ii
mgme umyidicernpardyzuinthat the Foe
lclal Matterszabove &bral-17, trill- IthL'UWHY
\ zmargc
rated then;
'ofthe
that-'betwixt
Ima, is 'mores and
(inongly
the Sun,
'and thereoreuhas les needitn then Suns
. beams to conerve its 'agdity and liquidit'yr;
and partly, inithnt thee huge va Regiuns
0f.-c\.EtI.-er wouldsbesloe'andrin vain-tial 'n
_ itbered
manner,IMnhantr,
if they werewhiqhin-all
not reqnented'by
yf
reaon Fand
likelihood m ofthe noble kinde, annun
CAP. 1 9;
54;
having
ttedfortheher
agitation
'and voiage
olidity,
of
her once
Vehicle
iceleial
will be as-natucally. carried whither he is.\
N n '
t e
546
LLBJH.
'
a <
as
CAP. ly.
ofthe Soule;
547
miery
.Y
548
'The Immortalzty
LIB. Ill.
CAP. 19.
ofthe Soule.
549
cour e.
ctHX' J'XzmAeHr-u
e; oZteS-r' ' TALE-Step' hear,
"E wem cEBu'Vd-'iQayS'Eds dpgegjxim Orzilds,
To this ene,
Who after death 'me reach th'zthereal Plain
Are raight made Gods, and 'le-ver die again,
No;
'he_\_
'
'o
'
a'
a
v. x.
'.
l-
'
'
I'
'
A.
p-z
'
..
'
'\
'u
I.
o .
>
'
no
p.
I?
..\
0
'
'wic.'
,
x.
n
y
_
'
.)
'
_
x
'i
'
'
'
'
3.
\
A
ul
'
d
.
H
"
v
l
'
A'
I
I,
0"
t'
P"
'
1
n
'
.
'
'
.
.
'a.
'
4.'
'
-.
..
\ -
0-
"
a
Q
'
'J
' n
lu
.'
O
"
"
J
r' '
.
. '-
'a
n
t.
'a
1.-
- A
o .
p A
p.
u
',-
'
'
o:.
' o
11i'
lk
A
*L
\
-
'
7'7 a
'\
A'
\"\
"a
'
.
.
. .
\\
'5
'
'
a',
'
'
t
'l
'
o:
'
-!'A
'
0
a ' I
a
.
a
(a
I 4
'1.
a
'
A 1
4
I .
.
o
'
'
e A
.-'
o
I'
.
p.
"'
l
'
'
'
I
1. -
'
'.
\
'0
a)
"
0.-
'
L'
r.
A
1
...
.
-a
'
'on
'
U'
.;
'
4-
'.*
(
a.
'1
\
a
'A
',
'
'.
...
..\
'
'
'
'
'
'
't
"
i.
t The Contents o the everal
* Chapters contained in this Treatie. *
fti
_Bi00K 1. U
'A
Chap. I,
1.
The Contents.
' Indicerpibilitir. I 3, A proof and illuration
>
16
* .
_. .
3, An applitatitn
pf
i.
The Contents.
ofthee Principles;
Ofthe nnion ofthe Se
condz'ry Subance conidered tran-verj,
6. An anwer to an 0 -7
ni! Chap.7.
t,
2. OfSelf-pezetrationf
3, Ofshlf'ehne
traction
and dilatatt'on. 4. Thev
power ape-53
netrating of Matter. 5. The power of-neoJ/ingz
6_. And of altering the Matter.
__ 42
Chap. 8. r. Plj'onr main Species ofi Spii
rits.
zhThe
v v-
\. .
49
trar}.'__
' Thc-Contenta' \
'The -' r, , -.E4ecdrptien zonr -,'
-_'- -
is
6. To the ixth' 7, To
heen zidhitherto-.
l Chap. I I _
64
\_.,\
75
l
* tnal
thingsorinIncorporeal.,
the uniruere"2,argue
Eences
iri
TheanE-uaion
ofPthtL'
. .
'
Argu
The Contents .
84
'orl. 5 . The
'the needei- _ .
89
again
demonrated
morefamiliarly.
4; That
the
\Start
cannot communicate
Thourhtt,i
nctif
ther with the Sun nor with one anothjer. 5 .That
'
Can'
The Contents.
'
B 0 0 K I I.
Chap.1 .
a. *
\x. AN addition of more Axiome:for the de
' '
monrating that there is a Spirit or
Immaterial Subance in Man. 2. The 7}uth
of the
r o the e Hobbs.
Axiome: 3.conThjermed
the
reign/haty"
rozfrom
Zf
the hcond Axiome. 4. The proofo vt e t ir .
_ 15 . The conrmation of thefourth rom the te
tained
The Contents.
tained a conrmation of the
An wer to
the
econd
Evaion.
14..
The
lainne
t' of the
ixth Axiome. 15, The proofzhf the eventh.
. _
Chap. 2.
109
5. Nor a multitude of
tated. His
Arg
The Contents. ,
ment. ' s. What mu he the meaning of thee
words, Nothing taketh beginning from it
elf, in the
Argument of Mr.'H0bbs. 6_A
fuller and more determinate explication ofthe
foregoing words; whoe en e ht'? 'evidently con
vinced to he, That no E ence of it elf can
Argument
his itgroundle,
'al
ly t e
Ar'
ument,whicoft-hemhll.
, then' 'h lifs.
htedThe)
' hi' e ,
it
theronge/l
of reconciling Free-will with Divine Preci
ence
and Pro
heciet.Put1 6.
That thefaculty'if
Free-will
ic/ePldome
in ue.
17. That e
ue of it 'it properly in Moral conict. 18.That
the Soul it not invincible there neither.
19. That Divine decrees either finde t In
rutnentt or malee them. 20. That the more
- e'xact we 'nen/ce Divine precience, even to the'
1. An Emmeration of undry
contrivancefor
hetpurpoe.
' ; Afntt
er dei
=
'
i monra
The Contents.
montration of the infufciency thereof'5 from.
whence io clearly evinced that Brutes have
Soule.aho-ue
7. That
Memory8.cannot
hefalvcd the
way
decrihedz
Norlrnagination.
161
pa
$.Nor
of directing
Mo
tion[egfSenationz
into the Muclesz
6,M_ueh
le of Ima
gination and rational Invention;
7, Nor of
1 73
CommontheSen5'upon
uppottion
Sou'hin
Body, - z. That
there isthere.is_._a_
ome parz ct
ticular
part inthe Body that it the Seat ofqm
ino'n Sene,3.!Aenefaldi-vion
their
'The Contents.
Sene.'
. That
thoe that 5.
plate
ont of
the
Head4,there
areoftwooirts.
Theit In-va-A
lidt'tj of Helmont': reaons, wherehy he would
pro-ne the Orifice ofthe Stomach to he the prin
a a'
t 'e
The Contents.
ren'te
The Contents.
there
the Brain.
are 'Animal** Spirits
' * in ' the 'Fentriile:
'. =
309.
6. At alo Forgetfulne';
ing
The Contents.
el
it Incorporeal.
'if
The Contents.
ofthe Jews were'of thi: opinion' 11. A
\
*. -
a'
'
'*
_*
237
'3
rule.
25 2
- Thc:-.Contents.. i,
'Philoophy of-*,hi_*t->Teoet.z
Dee-Cattesb
41.- Afull
imo,
pretation'o
25; 'That
Ariocle,
ma/ees'on'e two "Vehicles, 'Terrekridl-and
thereal-z_ which' 'is more' then ufcient. .. to
'prove
the:the
ioli-Ohlivion
'of 'herforiner
p _ 6;
That
ordinary Vehicle
of the Sou '
a ter
\ deathitAire. 7. The' duration of the Soul
r in' her Fever-'il Yehieles; -\
I Thatlthe union
Chap. 15'-
_ '
,257
'
L**'
to.
r.
y
ThcContent's.
'to biqfozgndih tbree'wrml Subjects; 4.,ct'yh4it.
this triple. Can finity ii: 7a1f0icbmp<tiHe "Maria
Subjcctzvizft e Soul afgan:
5 . 'bckporitz
*. * '
0 a 4.
t e
The Contents',
tho'
the 21pearingiro ma ofGhqs
well contribute
and Spcctresf
to the 'zq
s. A
on-'r proof thereof
undry cxdwplex.
.:.
' .2-8'6_
myof anceor/o;
7. Secony,coo
comcim
'That Soal
thereacting
tle-no ration'
doubt good
q/
Hgisom
ofter death,
i QL'Af'Mz
.,
A. '
X ,
.,
he:
The Contents.
ther Argument ofher activity out of this Body,
from her- conict; with it while he is in z't.
nohlz and
'bern-on: Spirit 13' the mo af- *
from of. the Smlt 'Inmortalz'ty
31 1
-\..\
BOOK'
The Contents;
.
'
"'5'13
. . ,-_,.\.\
it)
22;
'-*r
'
U_,__._
a"
'war ',"=**\,"\*\*..
U t \ _>7,
.- BOQIAIJLL
l'V!
"11
\.I.*.
'l
t.
I'.
\.
A\
\*M*.F*
\
1..
V
A
:r_
;A*\>
_
'\-
the
A 74;"ThatvthtSoWf-ZftmhtB-whi
nish-If- 59Khntjhebtndriyzasumfyn:
&arthly-JWM'M
aerMWe'hiol h; maw,
in =herTaietTYeikV=ehitkjha
Stmityv
Pleau-rq,and'_Pain;-'3 =7 That the-White mit
in.
her. 'twthpkealx
cehz
Vehitld'rcotzfrt
tithg9-'JI-ithk'iptdqtt'yx
* "ttto'btkfsofzsegt
and
Knowledge; " -1-o.>*.0f t e Sbotijt' imtrrihone.
gingthm'teniperofher
zlgz
al;tzzzzrjzme'.
the-hape ther-eae" der-it]
. I 2 . Ya
TT
If lewd,'XYZ'Iggz''
it 'a-(I _ 21
Seed
" Chap.
conidered
i; 7 il.hardy:
'- Of'l-theirihor'e''T
'*-Di-rr'1"e_nbns
22: 't -zthq
- Figure of the Soul: Dimenons.
Heterogendty ofbe' Eemt.
3. Ofthe
4. That there
i
The _.Contents".*l
kvittt Hemrogenei't'y kin
'Plaick - part
di. this
int? Plaickz
fro'no'thePercepiivc
51
. Ofthe.acti2ig.
Forth inherfraiming
of: tho'
tlze
-r*-.C.hap_
Soul after
2. un
death-it
That'the
th'e-x
Mireg.
nam'd,
2;-'hdt[:1/be>
Ihodt
real Congruicyzhf
11; A
>
m ar
. The Contents;
cular Anoertto the objection; 13; 'A fare:
incti0WD72tndmwn1he plat-e:
_*-
* ;
1364:
. 2, Fiat
-
er
The Contents.
her tom/ere with tie eetns more intelligihle.
then that with the Genii,
wonder
Chap.6_
' * (fit
T-he Contents;
anFfor the preent- pwpoe, 4', "Example!
approgued of hy Flienus. 5.-'Certai'n Example:
rejeiledyhy him, and yet approvedofhy Per
mous-s r -Chap.7'_.'
-- > -*
387
Signatures,_rejee7edhy Fienus:
2, Andyet A
x *
3 98'
Che-ry,
The Gpntcnts; .
. __(;hap.8,
- The' Contents.
'hilt Chain ofGovernrnent reaches down from
the hi'ghotji'zEthcreal Power-e' thro h' the A
erial to the very Inhabicants of t eEarth.
427
8. Ofthe natural
l,
The Contents.
other. -Io. That the reaart 'is proportionahty
the (ame in thing: of \ le/F conequence.
1 l. What mi/thtefmett may create to them
et-vex in the other World hy their Yea/atte mz
ta/ee: in ther; 12..'-That thoughithere were
'to Memory after Death, yet the man/ter of our
Life here may ow the eed: of the Soul: t;
ture happine or mtcry.
' 435 _
Ghap_lz.
Chap-13.'-
Gra-wty'
The Contents.
Grwity tum; he the eect ofmeer Meehani- *
cal powers, 7. TheLatt't'ede' ofthe operation: of
the Spirit of Nature; tow targe and where
bounded. ' 8. 'The reaon of it! name, 9. It:
eeaedz
Death.
' QhaF.
The Contents.
Chap-15.
I. An Anwer totbeexperia
thefear of Death;
7. And 4 down-hearing
8. of
ectaclex-
9. That'
6. A Be ly to the
Pp 2
Boy.
The Contents.
Ray e'ither of God or the Sonl of the World.
ligencies,
denying
Sub-ancicsand
in Mqn
andParticular'
Brutes. Immater'ial
491
I Chap.17_ - If That the Author haft/ing
afely condncted the Soul into her Aerial con
dition through thedangers of Death, might
well
fur
ther. heee'etned
_2. What front
reaon:attendin
-nri.e himherto any
conider
4. That the
matters theyCardanusgii-ues
di'ttted
7,to What
tredit Hi
. erony'mus
hit "Fathir:
Vi
on, 8, The other teinion ontof'zPlm'arch,
concerning
e great
God
Pan;
i9..
The thirdthe
andDeath
let/hafoft
Heiod,
Whoe
opinion.
Plptarchhah olzht>=and rened, IO. An
Fnnineration
'
ton
"' 'the**Z-vei;alParadoxes
'*
' i tained
The Contents.
tained
perfect Immortality_
good,
hut that
may attain an everlaing
ha/pine
afterthey
Death.
i
503
Chap. 18. I_ 'The Conagration of the.
World an opinion of the Stoicks. 2. Tnto
Way: of deroying the World the Ancients
ha-ue taken notice of, and eeciacty that hy
Fire. 3. That the Conagration of the
World,
us,ofis the
to he
un-.
der/hoodofarreaa
onely of it
thereects
hurning
Eactrth.
4_That
the endsonely
ofthetoStoicks
Conagrdtiqn
are
eompetihle
the Eariths
hurning.
5, An achnowledgement that the Earth may he
Pp 3
to
:.Thc Contents. .
to 'hie plaee. 6. That the Conagration
thereofwill
very fatal7.
te Fi-ue
the Soul:
of
'iehed Men prove
and Dxmons.
everal
opinion: eoneerning
after
the Can.
iagrationz
whereoftheirate
the
it,
That
they
are quite deroy'd by Fire.
8, Theyet-ered',
5 z 4.
2. The
Inu
The Contents.
Inuence of' thi: Extinction upon Man and
Bea, and all the aeriolDaemons imprion'd
within their e-veral Atmopheres in our
Vortcx. 3,T at it will doe little or no damage
t e] did, the,
5 38
FINIsp
'1
'
'
x
1.
Ham-t, *
>
L
'1
- an
.334,_1.*10.4f0f_TjyYujf-'o
-, ly,
if: .
5'2'13.
"54;"
K
(
'delllthqee
-6';'6'-66~>
.e*'""-'-'
.:
'A
_'
..
_
o
.
on.
'
<
'
.
-
'
'
'
'
'
'
..
'
'
..
..
'
'
..
'
'
*
.
>
.
_
..
'
.\
_
'
.. .
>
_.
>
..
'
'
'
.
.
'
'
o .
'
'
'
o
o
.\
-\
'
'
'
'
..
'
l'
'
'
'
I-
'
>
'
>
'.
'
'
..
-.
re.
"'M
,e
'
A
i
rB1299
M63
QMore, H.
The immortality o
IS
the soul.
'
AZTZE \'
UHLX'
'
. . 1.;<I
__ 4 .
LlBRARY, UNIVERSlTY OF CALlFORNlA, DAVIS