| John Hedley Brooke, John Brooke, Geoffrey Cantor - 2000 - 392 páginas
...revelation. Indeed, he explicitly stated his intention that they should 'treat their subject as a strictly natural science, the greatest of all possible sciences,...special, exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation'. If the reader of Gifford's will is left in any doubt about his conception of Natural Theology, his... | |
| Pausanias - 2003 - 398 páginas
...Morals, and of all Obligations and Duties thence arising . . . The lecturers to treat their subject as a natural science, the greatest of all possible sciences,...special exceptional or so-called miraculous revelation" (Jaki 1986: 72-74). "Iron VC": Marett claims the heroic title for Farnell (1941: 223). "The Chancellor"... | |
| Herbert James Paton - 2002 - 416 páginas
...Sole Substance, the Sole Being, the Sole Reality, and the Sole Existence'. He also speaks of it as 'the greatest of all possible sciences, indeed, in...sense, the only science, that of Infinite Being'. It may seem barely consistent with this — if one may entertain even a momentary doubt about the consistency.... | |
| Van Huyssteen - 2006 - 392 páginas
...Theology in the widest sense of the term," and the lecturers should "treat their subject as a strictly natural science, the greatest of all possible sciences, indeed, in one sense the only science, . . . without reference to or reliance upon any supposed special exceptional or so-called miraculous... | |
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