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SECTION I.
Of the General Principles of MORALS.
DISPUTES with Persons, pertinaciously obstinate in their Principles, are, of all others, the most irksome; except, per|haps, those with Persons, who really do not believe at all the Opinion they defend, but engage in the Controversy, from Affectation, from a Spirit of Op|position, or from a Desire of showing Wit and Inge|nuity, superior to the rest of Mankind. The same blind Adherence to their own Arguments is to be ex|cepted in both; the same Contempt of their Antago|nists; and the same passionate Vehemence, in inforc|ing Sophistry and Falshood. And as reasoning is not the Source, whence either Disputant derives his Tenets; 'tis in vain to expect, that any Logic, which speaks not to the Affections, will ever engage him to embrace sounder Principles.