[107] Dr. Urwick, Life of Howe, as cited, p. xxxii. [↑]

[108] A Demonstration of the Divine Authority of the Law of Nature and of the Christian Religion, by Samuel Parker, D.D., 1681, pref. The first part of this treatise is avowedly a popularization of the argument of Cumberland’s Disquisitio de Legibus Naturæ, 1672. Parker had previously published in Latin a Disiputatio de Deo et Providentia Divina, in which he raised the question, An Philosophorum ulli, et quinam Athei fuerunt (1678). [↑]

[109] Work cited, 2nd ed. 1682, pp. 32, 38–40, 45–48. [↑]

[110] Id. pp. 54–55. [↑]

[111] Id. p. 52. [↑]

[112] Twelve Sermons Preached upon Several Occasions, 1692, pp. 438–39. [↑]

[113] This has been ascribed, without any good ground, to Charles Blount. It does not seem to me to be in his style. [↑]

[114] Premonition to the Candid Reader. [↑]

[115] Hist. Nat. vii, 1. [↑]

[116] Pamphlet cited, pp. 20, 21. [↑]