1
results found in
3 ms
Page 1
of 1
[Around folios 1 to 19]
Defence of Economy - II. ag t I. Burke
Ch. 4
Concerning party men and their principles.
[Around folios 1 to 13]
Sextus for B.
[Around folios 20 to 41]
Ch. 9. Paul’s Style. I. Argument.
§. 1. For judging of aptitude of style in antient discourses the existing state of
things is no improper object of reference. What would be unapt now was unapt then.
§. 2. Forms of inaptitude in style - Forms of intellectual weakness in argumentation: 1.
Obscurity; - in its highest degree, Nonsensicalness: 2 Irrelevancy in argumentation; 3.
Irrelevancy in reference - demonstration ex auctoritate ill conducted; 4. Desultoriness
§. 3. By obscurity, inspiration may be disproved: and in Paul’s case, is.
§. 4. Nonsense - its abundance in Paul’s discourses.
§. 5. Paul’s demonstrations ex auctoritate - their irrelevancy.
[verso]
Ch. 8 2 o
Paul’s Style.
[Around folios 42 to 57]
Ch. 6 I. Argument
Paul’s Style
§. Different forms of Nonsense observable in the discourses of S t
Paul
[Around folios 58 to 68]
I. Argument
2 1
Style and Character
[Around folios 69 to 85]
I. Argument
Ch
Paul’s Character
§. 1. All things to all men.
§. 2. Falsified predictions.
[Around folios 86 to 128]
I. Argument
Ch. 6
Of Quasi-Miracles, Visions, Quasi-Visions and Trances.
[Around folios 133 to 140]
I. Argument.
Ch. 7
Natural causes of Paul’s Success.
§. 1. Energy - how operating as a pledge of security it produces persuasion in favour of
any discourse /doctrine/ howsoever absurd.
§. 2. Nonsense - its advantage - it is refutation proof.
§. 3. The success of a religion is no proof of its verity.
§. 4. The more absurd a religion, the stronger the attachment to it.
[Full folio wrapper around folios 141 to 214]
[front cover]
III Style.
Character.
III. Doctrine
(exclusive of Asceticism.
[spine]
1818.
Not Paul.
Style
Character
and
Doctrine
not
concerning
Asceticism.
[Around folios 141 to 162]
III. Doctrine
Ch
Paul’s Doctrines
§. 1. Plan of this Chapter
§. 2. Paul’s doctrine avowedly independent of that delivered to us as Jesus’s
§. 2. Real object and design of Paul’s doctrines - his temporal advancement.
§. 3. Doctrines more immediately subservient to that end 1. Magnification of faith: viz
in the sense inculcated by him.
§. 4. — 2. Depreciation of works: viz. in that Mosaic sense in which they were rivals to
faith as above in the struggle for salvation
§. 5. Doctrines less immediately and forcibly subservient: 1. Mysticism. 2. Asceticism
[Around folios 163 to 172]
Not Paul
III. Doctrine
§ Mysticism on the commemoration of the death of Jesus.
[verso]
Not Paul
Ch.
Conclusion.
[Around folios 173 to 186]
III. Doctrine.
Ch. III. Faith - its alledged necessity to salvation - alledged duty of possessing it.
[Around folios 187 to 199]
Ch. 9.
Paul’s Doctrine Ch. or §. Causes of Paul’s asceticism
§. 1. Cause I. In all other pursuits he beheld rivals to that he
preached: the greater the pleasure, the more formidable the rivalry
§. 2. II Cause II. Notion he found prevalent - heaven not to be purchased but by
sacrifices: the greater the sacrifice, the surer the purchase.
§. 3. Paul’s arguments in support of asceticism - their absurdity.
§. 4. By his anxiety to obtain female married converts, Paul is led into repugnancy to
Jesus
[Around folio 208]
III. Doctrine.
excepting Asceticism.
[Around folios 209 to 211]
Not Paul III Doctrine
§. 1. Faith - Paul’s meaning by it. Faith in him, or to his use
[Around folios 212 to 214]
III. Doctrine.
Ch. 10
Ch. 10 Mischievous Doctrines, deduced from Paul but unwarrantably
1
results found.
Page 1
of 1