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Joseph Glanvill Quotes

Joseph Glanvill Quotes
1.
And the will therein lieth, which dieth not. Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor? For God is but a great will pervading all things by nature of its intentness, Man doth not yield himself to the angels, nor unto death utterly, save only through the weakness of his feeble will.
Joseph Glanvill

2.
There is nothing in words and styles out suitableness that makes them acceptable and effective.
Joseph Glanvill

3.
Some pretences daunt and discourage us, while others raise us to a brisk assurance.
Joseph Glanvill

4.
It may not be impossible, but that our Faculties may be so construed, as always to deceive us in the things we judge most certain and assured.
Joseph Glanvill

5.
That though we are certain of many things, yet that Certainty is no absolute Infallibility, there still remains the possibility of our being mistaken in all matters of humane Belief and Inquiry.
Joseph Glanvill

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
And for mathematical science, he that doubts their certainty hath need of a dose of hellebore.
Joseph Glanvill

7.
It is the great beauty of true religion that it shall be universal, and a departure in any instance from universality is a corruption of religion itself.
Joseph Glanvill

8.
Man doth not yield him to the angels, nor unto death utterly, save only through the weakness of his feeble will.
Joseph Glanvill

Quote Topics by Joseph Glanvill: May Angel Understanding Belief Yield Humanity Men Needs Opinion Deceit Hype Women Knots Charity Truth Is Math Distance Discouraging Acceptable Noise Departure Inquiry Religion Prejudice Justice Rivers Knowledge Faculty Sage Science
9.
The precipitancy of disputation, and the stir and noise of passions that usually attend it, must needs be prejudicial to verity.
Joseph Glanvill

10.
The woman in us still prosecutes a deceit like that begun in the garden.
Joseph Glanvill

11.
What's impossible to all humanity may be possible to the metaphysics and physiology of angels.
Joseph Glanvill

12.
They that never peeped beyond the common belief in which their easy understandings were at first indoctrinated are strongly assured of the truth of their receptions.
Joseph Glanvill

13.
The sages of old live again in us, and in opinions there is a metempsychosis.
Joseph Glanvill

14.
Time, as a river, hath brought down to us what is more light and superficial, while things more solid and substantial have been immersed.
Joseph Glanvill

15.
The understanding also hath its idiosyncrasies as well as other faculties.
Joseph Glanvill

16.
How the purer spirit is united to his clod, is a knot too hard for fallen humanity to untie.
Joseph Glanvill

17.
The belief of our Reason is an Exercise of Faith, and Faith is an Act of Reason.
Joseph Glanvill

18.
Justice is but the distributing to everything according to the requirements of its nature.
Joseph Glanvill

19.
To converse at the distance of the Indes by means of sympathetic contrivances may be as natural to future times as to us is a literary correspondence.
Joseph Glanvill

20.
We have a mistaken notion of antiquity, calling that so which in truth is the world's nonage.
Joseph Glanvill

21.
We cannot conceive how the Foetus is form'd in the Womb, nor as much as how a Plant springs from the Earth we tread on ... And if we are ignorant of the most obvious things about us, and the most considerable within our selves, 'tis then no wonder that we know not the constitution and powers of the creatures, to whom we are such strangers.
Joseph Glanvill

22.
The union of a sect within itself is a pitiful charity; it's no concord of Christians, but a conspiracy against Christ; and they that love one another for their opinionative concurrence, love for their own sakes, not their Lord's.
Joseph Glanvill