The System of Nature, Volume 1 by baron d' Paul Henri Thiry Holbach
page 6 of 378 (01%)
page 6 of 378 (01%)
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diversified motion--or of the course of Nature.
CHAP. IV. Laws of motion common to every being of Nature-- attraction and repulsion--inert force-necessity. CHAP. V. Order and confusion--intelligence--chance. CHAP. VI. Moral and physical distinctions of man--his origin. CHAP. VII. The soul and the spiritual system. CHAP. VII. The soul and the spiritual system. CHAP. VIII. The intellectual faculties derived from the faculty of feeling. CHAP. IX. The diversity of the intellectual faculties; they depend on physical causes, as do their moral qualities.--The natural principles of society--morals--politics. CHAP. X. The soul does not derive its ideas from itself--it has no innate ideas. CHAP. XI. Of the system of man's free-agency. CHAP. XII. An examination of the opinion which pretends that the system of fatalism is dangerous. CHAP. XIII. Of the immortality of the soul--of the doctrine of a future state--of the fear of death. |
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