id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 28484 Mansel, Henry Longueville The Philosophy of the Conditioned .txt text/plain 29786 1332 62 unconditioned, God must be conceived as exempt from action in time: to be follows that we do not know God as He is in His absolute nature, but only philosophy of the absolute with belief in a personal God; for belief in a Unconditioned, and attempt merely to conceive an infinite succession How far they exist in the real body out of relation to us, Hamilton does absolute and infinite, without in any proper sense believing in God; and that God in some of His attributes is absolute without being infinite, In order to conceive the Unconditioned existing as a thing, we must infinite (in Hamilton's sense) are both inconceivable, the unconditioned attributes are relations; that the Absolute in Hamilton's sense, "the divines and philosophers speak of the absolute nature of God, they mean a of God. His argument is this: "Cousin's Absolute exists merely as a Hamilton maintains that the terms "absolute" and "infinite" are perfectly ./cache/28484.txt ./txt/28484.txt