An Essay on the Evils of Popular Ignorance by John Foster
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page 16 of 277 (05%)
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even in the old age of an ignorant man.--Excuses for the intellectual
inaptitude and perversion of uncultivated religious minds.--Animadversions on religious teachers. Section VI. Supposed method of verifying the preceding representation of the ignorance of the people.--Renewed expressions of wonder and mortification that this should be the true description of the English nation.--Prodigious exertions of this nation for the accomplishment of objects foreign to the improvement of the people.--Effects which might have resulted from far less exertion and resources applied to that object.--The contrast between what has been done, and what might have been done by the exertion of the national strength, exposed in a series of parallel representations.--Total unconcern, till a recent period, of the generality of persons in the higher classes respecting the mental state of the populace.--Indications of an important change in the manner of estimating them.--Measures attempted and projected for their improvement.--Some of these measures and methods insignificant in the esteem of projectors of merely political schemes for the amendment of the popular condition.--But questions to those projectors on the efficacy of such schemes.--Most desirable, nevertheless, that the political systems and the governing powers of states _could_ be converted to promote so grand a purpose.--But expostulations addressed to those who, desponding of this aid, despond therefore of the object itself.--Incitement to individual exertion.--Reference to the sublimest Example.--Imputation of extravagant hope.--Repelled; first, by a full acknowledgment how much the hopes of sober-minded projectors of improvement are limited by what they see of the disorder in the |
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