A Discourse Concerning the Being and Attributes of God / by Samuel Clarke, D.D.
- Title
- A Discourse Concerning the Being and Attributes of God / by Samuel Clarke, D.D.
- Author
- Clarke, Samuel
- Publication
- Edinburgh: A. Allardice
- 1823
- Rights/Permissions
-
This work is the property of the University of Michigan. It may be copied freely by individuals for personal use, research, and teaching (including distribution to classes) as long as this statement of availability is included in the text. It may be linked to freely in Internet editions of all kinds, including for-profit works. Redistribution by commercial or not-for-profit content providers is expressly forbidden.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ClarkDisco
- Cite this Item
-
"A Discourse Concerning the Being and Attributes of God / by Samuel Clarke, D.D." In the digital collection Digital General Collection. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ClarkDisco. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2025.
Contents
-
A
DEMONSTRATION
OF THE
BEING AND ATTRIBUTES OF GOD,
MORE PARTICULARLY
IN ANSWER TO MR HOBBES, SPINOZA,
AND THEIR FOLLOWERS. - dedication
- THE PREFACE.
- THE CONTENTS.
-
A
DEMONSTRATION
OF THE
BEING AND ATTRIBUTES
OF
GOD.- Introduction.
- Proposition I: Something must have existed from eternity.
- Proposition II: There must have existed from eternity one independent being.
- Proposition III: The one independent Being must be necessarily existing.
- Proposition IV: The essence of the self-existent Being [is] incomprehensible.
- Proposition V: That the self-existent being must be eternal.
- Proposition VI: That the self-existent being must be infinite and omnipresent.
- Proposition VII: That the self-existent being can be but one.
- Proposition VIII: That the self-existent being must be intelligent.
- Proposition IX: That the self-existent being must be a free agent.
- Proposition X: That the self-existent being must be all-powerful.
- Proposition XI: That the supreme cause and author of all things must of necessity be infinitely wise.
- Proposition XII: The supreme author of all things must be infinitely good, just, and true.
-
A
DISCOURSE
CONCERNING
THE UNCHANGEABLE OBLIGATIONS OF
NATURAL RELIGION
AND THE
TRUTH AND CERTAINTY
OF THE
CHRISTIAN REVELATION. -
LETTERS
TO
THE REVEREND DR CLARKE,
FROM A GENTLEMAN IN GLOUCESTERSHIRE:
RELATING
TO THE FIRST VOLUME OF THE FOREGOING
SERMONS;
WITH THE DOCTOR'S ANSWERS.- THE FIRST LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO THE FIRST LETTER.
- THE SECOND LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO THE SECOND LETTER.
- THE THIRD LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO THE THIRD LETTER.
- THE FOURTH LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO THE FOURTH LETTER.
- THE FIFTH LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO THE FIFTH LETTER.
- THE ANSWER TO A SIXTH LETTER,
- THE ANSWER TO A SEVENTH LETTER,