Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ...

About this Item

Title
Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ...
Author
Abercromby, David, d. 1701 or 2.
Publication
London :: Printed by H.C. for J. Taylor, L. Meredith, T. Bennet, R. Wilde ...,
1687.
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Subject terms
Knowledge, Theory of.
Philosophy -- Early works to 1800.
Science -- Early works to 1800.
Intellectual life.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26553.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Academia scientiarum, or, The academy of sciences being a short and easie introduction to the knowledge of the liberal arts and sciences, with the names of those famous authors that have written on every particular science : in English and Latine / by D. Abercromby ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26553.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

Page 69

Sectio Undecima. Ethica seu Moralis Philosophia.

HAEC ea est ars quae nos ad agen∣dum in omnibus conformiter rectae rationi dirigit: Primarium ip∣sius principium hoc est, Quod tibi vis fieri, & alteri feceris.

Docet Deum esse ultimum nostrum finem quia ille solus est Bonum Suffi∣ciens, cum nihil aliud beatos nos effi∣cere queat: Docet pariter nihil nos amare posse nisi sub specie boni, cujus triplex genus proponit Jucundum, Utile Honestum.

Page 71

Beatitudo nostra Objectiva, ut lo∣quuntur Scholae, solus Deus est, For∣malis nostra Beatitudo est ea mentis operatio qua Deum possidemus, In∣tuitiva scilicet Dei Visio.

Hic Habitus docet principia in∣terna actionum humanarum, aut esse nobis congenita, cujusmodi sunt Po∣tentiae; aut acquisita, cujusmodi sunt Habitus; docet intellectum movere vo∣luntatem ad agendum, & vice versa; habitum actuum repititione produ∣ctum, animae tribuere non ipsam qui∣dem agendi facultatem, seu poten∣tiam, sed majorem quamdam facili∣tatem.

Authores.

Aristoteles, Seneca, Plato, Cicero, &c.

Page 71

〈1 page duplicate〉〈1 page duplicate〉
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