| Henry Constable - 1873 - 204 էջ
...unscriptural chapter " Of a Future Life." VII. The object of Butler's chapter is to show that " our organised bodies are no more ourselves, or part of ourselves, than any other matter around us." The person, the man, the being we each feel ourselves to be has only a temporary but by no means necessary... | |
| Thomas Aiken Goodwin - 1874 - 244 էջ
...amounts to but this, that the living agent and those parts of the body mutually affect each other. . . . Our organs of sense and our limbs are certainly instruments which the living person, ourselves, makes use of to perceive and move with. There is not any probability that they are... | |
| John Charles Earle - 1876 - 270 էջ
...away, and tomb inherits tomb.1 ' Our organised bodies," as Bishop Butler says in his ' Analogy,' 2 ' are no more ourselves, or part of ourselves, than any other matter around us.' The natural body is in a constant state of decay and renovation, and it is not, nor ever will be, by... | |
| Epictetus - 1877 - 534 էջ
...directs and governs it. He does not say what the power is nor what he supposes it to be. " Upon the whole then our organs of sense and our limbs are certainly...ourselves, make use of to perceive and move with.'* Butler's Analogy, chap. i. 11 The will of a fool does not make law, he says. Unfortunately it does,... | |
| Edgar Dyke Whitmarsh - 1877 - 620 էջ
...or his feet the movers, in any other sense than as the microscope and the staff are. Upon the whole, then, our organs of sense and our limbs are certainly...persons, ourselves, make use of to perceive and move with : there is not any probability that they are any more ; nor, consequently, that we have any other kind... | |
| Jane E. Stebbins - 1878 - 632 էջ
...all others, but indivisible in itself, — and it seems inconsistent to speak in any other way, — it follows, " that our organized bodies are no more...part of ourselves, than any other matter around us." " The dissolution of several organized bodies," says Butler, "supposing ourselves to have successively... | |
| Jane E. Stebbins - 1879 - 634 էջ
...all others, but indivisible in itself, — and it seema inconsistent to speak in any other way, — it follows, "that our organized bodies are no more...part of ourselves, than any other matter around us." " The dissolution of several organized bodies," says Butler, "supposing ourselves to have successively... | |
| Robert Owen Thomas - 1881 - 102 էջ
...the living agent is a single being (which is as easy to conceive, as conceiving it to be a compound), it follows that our organized bodies are no more ourselves,...part of ourselves, than any other matter around us. And it is as easy to conceive how — (a) That matter, which is 'no part of ourselves, may be appropriated... | |
| William R. Hart - 1882 - 108 էջ
...the real being, and that the body is only its expression and vehicle. I quote from Bishop Butler: " It follows that our organized bodies are no more ourselves...part of ourselves than any other matter around us. And it is as easy to conceive how matter which is no part of ourselves may be appropriated to us in... | |
| Joseph Butler - 1883 - 376 էջ
...or his feet the movers, in any other sense than as the microscope and the staff ire Upon the whole, then, our organs of sense, and our limbs, are certainly instruments' which the living persons ourselves 'f"S. What shall we say, then, of the shoemaker? That lie outs with \'a make use of to perceive and... | |
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