This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
20137 | 4, 6;[?] |
20137 | Second, the"Mimansa"( inquiry), devoted to the solution of the problem, How can the material world spring from Brahma, or the immaterial? |
31608 | And what was there at the beginning? |
31608 | But is it true? |
31608 | Delitzsch voluminously asked:_ Wo lag das Paradies?_ There it is. |
31608 | Have you approached your neighbour''s wife? |
31608 | Have you stolen your neighbour''s garment? |
31608 | He asked the patient: Have you shed your neighbour''s blood? |
31608 | Or is it that you have failed to clothe the naked? |
22213 | Quid referam ut volitet crebras intacta per urbes Alba Palaestino sancta columba Syro? 22213 Si tribuunt fata genesis, cur deos oratis?" |
22213 | [ 29] Must we then believe that Hebraic monotheism had some influence upon the mysteries of the Great Mother? 22213 --Sollte übrigens die{ 259} Bedeutung Welt diesem Worte erst durch Einfluss griechischer Speculation zu Teil geworden sein? 22213 And are not the physical and moral qualities of the different races manifestly determined by the climate in which they live? 22213 And how could it be otherwise? 22213 Bréhier,Orient ou Byzance?" |
22213 | But how can the presence in the Occident of that begging and low nomadic clergy be explained? |
22213 | But how did he get to Italy from the Persian uplands? |
22213 | By what principle have such a quality and so great an influence been attributed to the stars? |
22213 | By what secret virtue did the Egyptian religion exercise this irresistible influence over the Roman world? |
22213 | Compare what{ 270} Hippolytus,_ Philos._, V, I, says of Isis( Ishtar?) |
22213 | Did any exchange take place between these rival sects? |
22213 | Did not the blending of the races result in multiplying the variety of disagreements? |
22213 | Did the success of their preaching mean progress or retrogression from the standard of the ancient Roman faith? |
22213 | Does not the movement of the tide depend on the course of the moon? |
22213 | For instance, Were all the men that perish together in a battle, born at the same moment, because they had the same fate? |
22213 | From what sources are we to derive our knowledge of the Oriental religions in the Roman empire? |
22213 | Had not a complacent syncretism engendered a multiplication of sects? |
22213 | Had not the confused collision of creeds produced a division into fragments, a communication of churches? |
22213 | How did the barbaric ideas refine themselves and combine with each other when thrown into the fiery crucible of imperial syncretism? |
22213 | However, can we speak of_ one_ pagan religion? |
22213 | Is his name derived from that of the Egyptian god Osiris- Apis, or from that of the Chaldean deity Sar- Apsi? |
22213 | Is it for reasons derived from their apparent motion and known through observation or experience? |
22213 | Is not the rising of certain constellations accompanied every year by storms? |
22213 | Is the study which we have just outlined possible? |
22213 | It speaks of a"de[orum?] |
22213 | Obdormiscunt enim superi remeare ut ad vigilias debeant? |
22213 | Or, on the other hand, do we not observe that twins, born at the same time, have the most unlike characters and the most different fortunes? |
22213 | Quid dormitiones illae quibus ut bene valeant auspicabili salutatione mandatis?" |
22213 | See Yasht V, XXI, 94: What"becomes of the libations which the wicked bring to you after sunset?" |
22213 | Under what influences did the Persian magic come into existence? |
22213 | Was Serapis of native origin, or was he imported from Sinope or Seleucia, or even from Babylon? |
22213 | Were not a great number of famous jurists like Ulpian of Tyre and Papinian of Hemesa natives of Syria? |
22213 | What called forth and permitted this spiritual commotion, of which the triumph of Christianity was the outcome? |
22213 | What do we find three centuries later? |
22213 | What items will be of assistance to us in this undertaking? |
22213 | What new elements did those priests, who made proselytes in every province, give the Roman world? |
22213 | What was the result of this confusion of heterogeneous doctrines whose multiplicity was extreme and whose values were very different? |
22213 | What was the superiority attributed to the creeds of that country? |
22213 | What was this Asiatic religion that had suddenly been transferred into the heart of Rome by an extraordinary circumstance? |
22213 | When and how did it spread? |
22213 | Who can tell what influence chambermaids from Antioch or Memphis gained over the minds of their mistresses? |
22213 | Why did even an Illyrian general like Aurelian look for the most perfect type of pagan religion in that country? |
22213 | Why was the influence of the Orient strongest in the religious field? |
22213 | Why was this Egyptian worship the only one of all Oriental religions to suffer repeated persecutions? |
22213 | Will a girl just coming into this world have gallant adventures? |
22213 | [ 13] What was the theology they learned? |
29893 | Does Heaven plainly declare its Ming? |
29893 | For whom did ye fashion me,she says;"wherefore was I made?" |
29893 | A man ceases to think for himself what is right and good, and only asks, What does the law say? |
29893 | And for what end does he wield this mighty rule? |
29893 | And how indeed is he to be related to the world? |
29893 | And lastly, What is the religion of Egypt? |
29893 | And should it not be the same in religion? |
29893 | Art thou become like unto us?" |
29893 | But can he not worship another god when the first one is out of sight and out of mind? |
29893 | But how could all mankind forget a pure religion? |
29893 | But how did early man regard these great powers before this? |
29893 | But if religion is in this way a public matter, a matter of the tribe and its concerns, what place is there in it for the individual? |
29893 | But it presents the gravest difficulties; for why should the savage make a god of a stick or a stone, and attribute to it supernatural powers? |
29893 | Can the higher nature- deities be accounted for by this theory as well as the minor spirits of the parts of nature? |
29893 | Can this be called religion? |
29893 | Did beast worship spring by a process of degradation from the worship of the high gods? |
29893 | Did he make it, and is he responsible for it? |
29893 | Did he really need to argue out the belief that they had souls, before he felt drawn to wonder at them, and to seek to enter into relations with them? |
29893 | Did the Chinese conceive this ruler as identical with heaven, or as a personality dwelling in it or above it? |
29893 | Did the higher worship then spring by a process of development out of the lower? |
29893 | Did they not appear to him adorable by the very impressions they made upon his various senses? |
29893 | Early Religion and Morality.--How did this early religion bear upon morality? |
29893 | How did it get there? |
29893 | How, by whom, and when were they formed into a nation? |
29893 | In how far was it a power for righteousness? |
29893 | Is it possible to give any description of the religion the Aryans had in common before they developed it in different ways in their various lands? |
29893 | Is it the cross?] |
29893 | Is that because such worship did not flourish in their day? |
29893 | Nirvana.--Our account of the doctrine would appear incomplete if we did not attempt to answer the question, What is Nirvana? |
29893 | Religious faith forbade the thought that such a thing was possible; if Israel was destroyed, where would Israel''s religion be? |
29893 | See Psalms Iceland, 264 decay of old religion of, 272 Idols, none in primitive religion, 73 Arabia, 219, 220 German? |
29893 | The Doctrine.--And what is the message he proclaims? |
29893 | The Homeric Gods.--What, then, is the religion of Homer? |
29893 | The Vedic Gods.--And who are the gods who receive this worship? |
29893 | The great discovery being made, and duly pondered and realised, the question arose, What was to be done with it? |
29893 | Theories Accounting for Animal Worship.--What did this worship mean? |
29893 | This world of change and decay, of disappointment and sorrow, what has the perfect being to do with that? |
29893 | Though he worshipped heaven yesterday, can he not worship the sun to- day, or the storm, or the great sea? |
29893 | Was the legend of Mahavira, then, a sectarian version of the legend of Gautama, did no such person exist, at least as the founder of a religious body? |
29893 | What are the earliest gods of the land, and in what relation do the various gods which were worshipped in it stand to each other? |
29893 | What are these? |
29893 | What is religion morally? |
29893 | What is the motive of worship? |
29893 | What is the relation between the divine laws which are written in the hearts of all men, and human laws which sometimes contradict these older ones? |
29893 | What is the worshipper to do? |
29893 | What then is thought of the present existence of the hero? |
29893 | What was the method which was held to have had such results? |
29893 | When he does tell us of the beginnings of religion, what is his view? |
29893 | When we ask for the common type of working Semitic religion, where are we to look for it? |
29893 | Where, then, was the early home of the undivided Aryan[1] race, from which the swarms first issued which were to conquer and rule the various lands? |
29893 | Who are the Egyptians, and where did they come from? |
29893 | Who told him about a god, that he should call a stick god, or about supernatural powers, that he should suppose a stick to work wonders? |
29893 | Why does a curse cleave to a certain house, evil producing evil from generation to generation? |
29893 | Why is Prometheus, though the noblest benefactor of the human race, doomed to undergo such sufferings? |
29893 | Wonder, no doubt, is always present in it, but what is there in it beyond wonder? |
29893 | Worship in Homer.--The gods being of such a nature, what relations does man keep up with them, and how do they affect his life? |
29893 | and how are we to account for it? |
38100 | Doctor,a man may say,"can I swallow this without being choked?" |
38100 | How,for example, we may ask,"can anything be recognized as divine, unless human judgment is passed upon it? |
38100 | I said,''then you consider that even a stone in the bladder is created by God?'' 38100 Well said wife; what though we are punished for the many? |
38100 | What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul? |
38100 | Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord( Jehovah), or being his counsellor hath taught him? |
38100 | ** With this and the following saying we may compare the words of the Psalms--"Do not I hate those, O Lord, that hate thee? |
38100 | 11, a question,"why say the scribes that Elias must first come?" |
38100 | 13 is generally translated"ask,"as we should remark,"well, if he asks me what must I say?" |
38100 | 3, wherein we find certain disciples asking,"What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?" |
38100 | 33), who hewed Agag into pieces? |
38100 | 55, where we find the people saying,"Is not this the carpenter''s son? |
38100 | 9) remarks--"Si adest dea Prema ut subacta se non commoveat quum prematur, dea Pertunda quid ea facit?" |
38100 | Against this, or side by side with it, what can Great Britain, or any other Christian country show? |
38100 | Amongst the questions which they provoke, the first is,"how far the accounts given to us are to be depended upon?" |
38100 | Amongst their prayers, or invocations, were the formulas,"Wilt Thou blot us out, O Lord, for ever? |
38100 | Are they honest? |
38100 | Are ye not much better than they?... |
38100 | Are you not offending Him in curing those whom He would kill?'' |
38100 | Are you not opposing God by so doing? |
38100 | Are"divines"honest? |
38100 | Because the Mizraim punished killing, were they taught of God? |
38100 | But in what consists the horror, unless in the fact that the sacrifice was seen by the worshippers? |
38100 | But king over whom? |
38100 | But why should we be surprised at the followers of"the Son"doing that which"the Father"ordained? |
38100 | Can a bigot be a liberal? |
38100 | Can a most virtuous life command for the individual who has practised it an eternity of bliss? |
38100 | Can civilization grow out of barbarism? |
38100 | Can the Christian adopt the belief that Mahometan and Mormon are both orthodox because they have faith? |
38100 | Can we believe him to be honest? |
38100 | Choice proposed-- faith or reason? |
38100 | Comes this spark from earth, Piercing and all- pervading, or from heaven? |
38100 | Did the Devil give to the heathen the knowledge of Satan''s origin and power? |
38100 | Do Papal authorities believe in the annual miracle at Naples? |
38100 | Does travel tell us of any set of teachers more self- denying than the individuals who devote themselves as religious Buddhists? |
38100 | During the talk, the woman, every time she uttered a sentence, said,"Am I right?" |
38100 | For the credulous, what fact could be more strongly attested than this? |
38100 | Had not He already made man out of dust and woman out of man? |
38100 | His argument is-- Can a man who hates the light be worthy to speak of the"Sun of Righteousness?" |
38100 | How far this is true has been repeatedly proved by those who have made the spirits say anything--"Where is my sister?" |
38100 | How should a doubt be tackled-- by inquiry, or by ignoring it? |
38100 | If Jesus was right, why not enforce his teaching? |
38100 | If compass wrong, why steer by it? |
38100 | If every one was to live from hand to mouth, who would keep a calf until it became a heifer, or a lamb to become a sheep? |
38100 | If so, why did the Jews, and why do Christians, adopt it? |
38100 | If this can not be done, how can the follower of Jesus hope to convert others to his belief, unless by the use of reason? |
38100 | If, for an example, the question were put to both"What is honesty?" |
38100 | If, then, the theologian uses reason as a weapon against heterodoxy, upon what ground can he object to its being employed by another? |
38100 | In other words, is there anything of the nature of absolute goodness in the attempt to make oneself miserable? |
38100 | In this hymn I have only omitted the repeated question-- Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
38100 | Is Bishop Browne honest in controversy? |
38100 | Is it honest in religion to promulgate that which we knew to be wrong, or which we dare not inquire into for fear of consequences? |
38100 | Is it possible that any minister in politics, or religion, can believe that"Honesty is the best policy,"and yet act with double- dealing? |
38100 | Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? |
38100 | Is the"firm"or"company"honest? |
38100 | Is this honest? |
38100 | Is this punishment intended, not for our reformation, but for our destruction?" |
38100 | Is, then, the sturdy English theologian to be content to leave the followers of Islam alone, because they have faith? |
38100 | It is true that the youth replied,"Wist ye not that I must be about my father''s business?" |
38100 | It will be seen that the question to which I refer is this--"Shall men and states be governed by faith?" |
38100 | L 7, 14,--"Who maketh his angels spirits;""Are they not all ministering spirits?" |
38100 | Lying miracles-- are they promulgated honestly? |
38100 | Now, if we require from ourselves a distinct answer to the question, what is prayer? |
38100 | One may now ask,"Why did people think that it was part of the Christian''s privileges or powers to speak with tongues?" |
38100 | Ought the divine to be less honest than the merchant? |
38100 | Pilate is reported to have said--"What is truth?" |
38100 | Prophet who says that he converses with an angel--is he to be credited? |
38100 | The Siamese author next discusses the question,"how shall a man select that religion which he can trust to for his future happiness?" |
38100 | The question has often suggested itself to my own mind,"How much has insanity of mind had to do with religion?" |
38100 | Then come the important questions--"What right has any religious bigot to profess himself a liberal?" |
38100 | Thence proceeded the earth,_ Ua, or Mot_( Sans);_ Math_( Sans) making fire by rubbing sticks( coitus?) |
38100 | Therefore take no thought, saying, what shall we eat, or what shall we drink, or wherewithal shall we be clothed?... |
38100 | Upon this point the following passages will be found very significant:--''Who has seen the primeval being at the time of His being born? |
38100 | Was the Jewish ignorance the result of Divine"inspiration?" |
38100 | What does he find? |
38100 | What have we here? |
38100 | What is faith? |
38100 | What is that One alone, who has upheld these six spheres in the form of an unborn?''" |
38100 | What is the value of education unless it enables us, when necessary, to find whether we are in the right way or not? |
38100 | What though our bodies be disgracefully exposed on these crosses? |
38100 | What was the massacre at Cawnpore to that in Jericho and other Canaanite cities? |
38100 | What, let us ask, would the orthodox declare was amissing? |
38100 | When was India first known to Christians? |
38100 | When we find out that, what will be our opinion of the captain? |
38100 | Whence, whence this manifold creation sprang? |
38100 | Which must the faithful follow? |
38100 | Who can assert that Abraham and Jacob, Moses and Aaron, were taught of God, and that to the Hebrews alone has the Creator revealed His will? |
38100 | Who is the God to whom we shall offer our sacrifice? |
38100 | Who knows from whence this great creation sprang? |
38100 | Who knows the secret? |
38100 | Who would believe the ravings of a lunatic, even though he told us that God had sent him with a message to man? |
38100 | Why do Christians, as a body, reject the revelation made to Mahomet, and the frequent inspirations which give laws to the latter- day saints? |
38100 | Why take ye thought for raiment, consider the lilies of the field... if God so clothe the grass... shall he not much more clothe you? |
38100 | Why, however, should any goal be undesirable which leads us nearer to truth? |
38100 | Why, then, do not men, like Mr Gladstone, join it? |
38100 | Without further preface, let us inquire"what Faith really is?" |
38100 | Would you behold his head and his fair face? |
38100 | Your soldiers subjugate gods and men, but not me, I shall crush them by wisdom, then what will you do?" |
38100 | am I justified in using my reason only in one direction? |
38100 | and am I not grieved with those that rise up against thee? |
38100 | and his brethren James, and Joses, and Simon, and Judas, and his sisters, are they not all with us?" |
38100 | and if we are to mete out degrees of culpability, to whom must the severest punishment be awarded? |
38100 | and if what has been given to me as sound meat, is rotten in reality, am I bound to eat it? |
38100 | and that the Jew must still be dear to Jehovah, inasmuch as he still clings closely by faith to the revelation given to Moses and the prophets? |
38100 | and, in the next place, whether we get that to which we are entitled? |
38100 | and,"Is it not right for us to risk our own souls in support of a faith which we do not, but which the people do, believe?" |
38100 | can it do me good in any way? |
38100 | from earth are the breath and blood, but where is the soul-- who may repair to the sage to ask this? |
38100 | if I profess to argue, am I not bound to be logical? |
38100 | if every one in new Jerusalem is a ruler, what is he a ruler of? |
38100 | if he was wrong, why not say so? |
38100 | ii.,--"Who now,"he makes Lucilius say,"believes in Hippocentaurs and Chimeras? |
38100 | in other words,"by the hierarchy of the most numerous section of the community-- or by reason-- i.e., by the good sense of the majority?" |
38100 | is not his mother called Mary? |
38100 | or over what? |
38100 | or what old woman is now to be found so weak and ignorant as to stand in fear of those infernal monsters which once so terrified mankind? |
38100 | or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
38100 | or, How can any revelation be accepted, unless the mind has examined the messenger and the message?" |
38100 | or, must he still endeavour to convert them by the use of reason? |
38100 | or,"What shall a man give in exchange for his soul?" |
38100 | v. 6--"Neither say thou before the angel that it was an error; wherefore... should God destroy the works of thine hands?" |
38100 | was water the deep abyss, the chaos which swallowed up everything?" |
38100 | what is that endowed with substance that the unsubstantial sustains? |
38100 | what was the refuge of what? |
38100 | who proclaimed it here? |
1397 | And if you die to prove that they make five, will that make them five? |
1397 | And in what respect are you more worthy than we? |
1397 | And what is the natural law? |
1397 | And what is this luminous doctrine that fears the light? 1397 And what right have you, more than we,"said the Imans,"to constitute yourselves the representatives of God? |
1397 | Be it so,replied the legislator;"but if they contradict each other, who shall reconcile them?" |
1397 | Besides, what addition or diminution will it make to our existence, to answer yes or no to all these chimeras? 1397 Besides, why resort forever to incomplete and insufficient miracles? |
1397 | By what right do you constitute yourselves mediators between God and us? |
1397 | Do you love pleasure and hate pain? |
1397 | Farther, what is believing, if believing influences no action? 1397 First, considering the diversity and opposition of the creeds to which you are attached, we ask on what motives you found your persuasion? |
1397 | How dare you speak of morals,answered the Christian priests,"you, whose chief lived in licentiousness and preached impurity? |
1397 | How prove you that? |
1397 | If error has its martyrs, what is the sure criterion of truth? 1397 If his justice,"replied the simple men,"is not like ours, by what rule are we to judge of it? |
1397 | If that law is sufficient, why has he given any other? 1397 If the evil spirit works miracles, what is the distinctive character of God? |
1397 | If the knowledge of these things is so necessary, why have we lived as well without it as those who have taken so much trouble concerning it? 1397 Is it because you pretend to have issued from the head of Brama, and the rest of the human race from the less noble parts of his body? |
1397 | Is it not, then, demonstrated that truth is not the object of your contests? 1397 Is it to you or to God I am to confess?" |
1397 | Is sugar sweet, and gall bitter? |
1397 | Now, tell us, is there a cavern in the centre of the earth, or inhabitants in the moon? |
1397 | We understand them not,said the simple men;"and how came this just God to give you this privilege over us? |
1397 | What, then, is your persuasion to prove, if it changes not the existence of things? 1397 Where is the proof of these orders?" |
1397 | Who is this man,cried all the groups,"who thus insults us without a cause? |
1397 | ''Who knoweth,''said he,''the spirit of a man that it goeth upwards? |
1397 | * And is not the testimony of our fathers and our gods as valid as that of the fathers and the gods of the West? |
1397 | * What is a people? |
1397 | *** Of what real good has been the commerce of India to the mass of the people? |
1397 | After reading this performance it will be asked, how it was possible in 1784 to have had an idea of what did not take place till the year 1790? |
1397 | Alas, if man is blind, shall his misfortune be also his crime? |
1397 | Am I not an unbeliever? |
1397 | And can not a merciful God correct without extermination? |
1397 | And can we ever expect the union of so many circumstances? |
1397 | And do the plants no longer bear fruit and seed? |
1397 | And for what reason are their books to be preferred to ours? |
1397 | And have we not an equal right to use them, in choosing what to believe and what to reject? |
1397 | And how can you hold any converse with a man of such bad connexions? |
1397 | And how did its first authors propagate it, when, being alone possessed of it, their own people were to them profane? |
1397 | And if it treats us with forbearance, what authority have you to be less indulgent? |
1397 | And if the first obstacles are overcome, why should the others be insurmountable? |
1397 | And if we should be deceived, how will that just God save us contrary to law, or condemn us on a law which we have not known?" |
1397 | And if, in the anguish of their miseries, they see not the remedies, is it the ignorance of God which is to blame, or their ignorance? |
1397 | And of what concern the subtleties with which their folly torments itself? |
1397 | And the large body said to the little one: Why are you separated from us? |
1397 | And those nations which call themselves polished, are they not the same that for the last three centuries have filled the earth with their injustice? |
1397 | And what action is influenced by believing, for instance, that the world is or is not eternal?" |
1397 | And what is doubt, replied he, that it should be a crime? |
1397 | And what, said I, are those mad animalculae, which destroy each other? |
1397 | And when, after the destruction of crops, famine has ensued, is it the vengeance of God which has produced it, or the mad fury of mortals? |
1397 | And who shall assure us that you are not in error yourselves, or that you will not lead us into error? |
1397 | And who will attest what no one has seen? |
1397 | And will you grant them privileges of belief to our detriment?" |
1397 | And yet, are not these the children of the prophets? |
1397 | And you call God just? |
1397 | And you, learned doctors, we call you to witness; is not this the unanimous testimony of all ancient monuments? |
1397 | And you, rebel and misguided nation, perceive you not that your new leaders are misleading you? |
1397 | And, moreover, why all these laws, and what is the object proposed by them?" |
1397 | And, what do you expect, oh vanquished, from useless groans? |
1397 | Answer, generation of falsehood and iniquity, hath God deranged the primitive and settled order of things which he himself assigned to nature? |
1397 | Are all the nations still in that age when nothing was seen upon the globe but brutal robbers and brutal slaves? |
1397 | Are courage and strength of body and mind virtues in the law of nature? |
1397 | Are idleness and sloth vices in the law of nature? |
1397 | Are ignorance and silliness common? |
1397 | Are men still in their forests, destitute of everything, ignorant, stupid and ferocious? |
1397 | Are not other laws beneficent likewise? |
1397 | Are not other laws evident? |
1397 | Are not other laws just? |
1397 | Are not other laws pacific? |
1397 | Are the fires of the sun extinct in the regions of space? |
1397 | Are the holy people of God less fortunate than the races of impiety? |
1397 | Are the rains and the dews suspended in the air? |
1397 | Are the social virtues numerous? |
1397 | Are the streams dried up? |
1397 | Are the talents and genius of governors turned to the benefit of the people? |
1397 | Are then the Vedes, the Chastres, and the Pourans inferior to the Bibles, the Zendavestas, and the Zadders? |
1397 | Are they his passions which, under a thousand forms, torment individuals and nations, or are they the passions of man? |
1397 | Are we not men of another race-- the noble and pure descendants of the conquerors of this empire? |
1397 | Are we to understand by filial love a passive and blind submission? |
1397 | Are you not men like us?" |
1397 | Are you not of our number? |
1397 | Art thou disposed to think that the human race degenerates? |
1397 | Before adopting this doctrine, rather than that, did you first compare? |
1397 | Besides, how can you answer for us? |
1397 | But being born ignorant, is not ignorance a law of nature? |
1397 | But can man individually acquire this knowledge necessary to his existence, and to the development of his faculties? |
1397 | But does not even this prove that our sensations can deceive us respecting the end of our preservation? |
1397 | But does not this necessity of preservation engender in individuals egotism, that is to say self- love? |
1397 | But if a man is born strong, has he a natural right to master the weak man? |
1397 | But is not society to man a state against nature? |
1397 | But, then, as our will is not sufficient to procure us those qualities, is it a crime to be destitute of them? |
1397 | Can intention be a merit or a crime? |
1397 | Can liberty be born from the bosom of despots? |
1397 | Can man feel otherwise than as he is affected? |
1397 | Can the teachers and followers of this religion be better classed than under the heads of knavery and credulity? |
1397 | Can we receive them without examining the evidence? |
1397 | Children of nature, how long will you walk in the paths of ignorance? |
1397 | Demands he devastation for homage, and conflagration for sacrifice? |
1397 | Did heaven reveal it to be kept a secret? |
1397 | Disciple of Truth, knowest thou that object? |
1397 | Do such orders exist in nature? |
1397 | Do the mountains withhold their springs? |
1397 | Do the seas no longer emit their vapors? |
1397 | Do thus perish then the works of men-- thus vanish empires and nations? |
1397 | Do you endure the ardor of the sun, and the torment of thirst, to reap the harvest or thrash the grain? |
1397 | Do you give growth to the plants of the earth, that you may waste them? |
1397 | Do you look upon opulence as a virtue? |
1397 | Do you not give them arbitrators? |
1397 | Do you see, said the Genius, those flames which spread over the earth, and do you comprehend their causes and effects? |
1397 | Do you suppose that all men hear equally, see equally, feel equally, have equal wants, and equal passions? |
1397 | Do you toil to furrow the field? |
1397 | Do you traverse deserts, like the merchant? |
1397 | Do you, like the shepherd, watch through the dews of the night? |
1397 | Does he not know, better than men, what befits his dignity?" |
1397 | Does it allow us to repair it by prayers, vows, offerings to God, fasting and mortifications? |
1397 | Does it enjoin forgiveness of injuries? |
1397 | Does it interdict even an inclination to rob? |
1397 | Does it prescribe humility as a virtue? |
1397 | Does it prescribe mildness and modesty? |
1397 | Does it prescribe to us, after having received a blow on one cheek, to hold out the other? |
1397 | Does not instinct alone teach the law of nature? |
1397 | Does not this overturn every idea of justice and of reason?" |
1397 | Does the law of nature consider as virtues faith and hope, which are often joined with charity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature forbid robbery? |
1397 | Does the law of nature forbid the use of certain kinds of meat, or of certain vegetables, on particular days, during certain seasons? |
1397 | Does the law of nature interdict absolutely the use of wine? |
1397 | Does the law of nature look on that absolute chastity so recommended in monastical institutions, as a virtue? |
1397 | Does the law of nature order sincerity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe continence? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe probity? |
1397 | Does the law of nature prescribe to do good to others beyond the bounds of reason and measure? |
1397 | Dost thou not know that system of worship? |
1397 | Doth sanctity consist in destruction? |
1397 | Everything that tends to preserve, or to produce is therefore a good? |
1397 | From what you say, one would think that poverty was a vice? |
1397 | Give me some examples? |
1397 | Has it not hereby declared you all equal and free? |
1397 | Has not God endowed us, as well as him, with eyes, understanding, and reason? |
1397 | Hath God the heart of a mortal, with passions ever changing? |
1397 | Hath heaven denied to earth, and earth to its inhabitants, the blessings they formerly dispensed? |
1397 | Have not virtue and vice an object purely spiritual and abstracted from the senses? |
1397 | Have the Christians an exclusive right of setting up a blind faith? |
1397 | Have the factitious and conventional laws tended to that object and accomplished that aim? |
1397 | Have these laws, on the contrary, restrained the effort of man toward his own happiness? |
1397 | Have vice and virtue degrees of strength and intensity? |
1397 | Have we any thing equal to that? |
1397 | Have you privileges that we have not? |
1397 | Hence follows this other question: how came they to the knowledge of your fathers, who themselves had no other means than you to conceive them? |
1397 | How can we, by the law of nature, repair the evil we have done? |
1397 | How do our sensations deceive us? |
1397 | How do you divide the virtues? |
1397 | How do you prove this assertion? |
1397 | How does it forbid libertinism? |
1397 | How does it forbid murder? |
1397 | How does it prohibit gluttony? |
1397 | How does nature order man to preserve himself? |
1397 | How does the law of nature forbid ignorance? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe filial love? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe justice? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe science? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe sobriety? |
1397 | How does the law of nature prescribe the practice of good and virtue, and forbid that of evil and vice? |
1397 | How is charity or the love of one''s neighbor a precept and application of it? |
1397 | How is drunkenness considered in the law of nature? |
1397 | How is equality a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is justice derived from these three attributes? |
1397 | How is liberty a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is property a physical attribute of man? |
1397 | How is this virtue prescribed to us? |
1397 | How long, with vain clamors, will he accuse Fate as the author of his calamities? |
1397 | I have said, with a sigh: is man then born but for sorrow and anguish? |
1397 | If God be good, can your penances please him? |
1397 | If God is good, will he be the author of your misery? |
1397 | If Heaven holds us guilty and in abhorrence, why does it impart to us the same blessings as to you? |
1397 | If all are equal in the civil state, where is our prerogative of birth, of inheritance? |
1397 | If all men are equal, where is our exclusive right to honors and to power? |
1397 | If all men are to be free, what becomes of our slaves, our vassals, our property? |
1397 | If at any time, in any place, individuals have ameliorated, why shall not the whole mass ameliorate? |
1397 | If guides, who teach mankind to see for themselves, mislead and deceive them, what can be expected from those who profess to keep them in darkness? |
1397 | If he attacks us, shall we not defend ourselves? |
1397 | If he is just, will he be the accomplice of your crimes? |
1397 | If he likes to believe without examination, must we therefore not examine before we believe? |
1397 | If he wishes to punish, hath he not earthquakes, volcanoes, and thunder? |
1397 | If his decrees have been formed on foresight of every circumstance, can your prayers change them? |
1397 | If infinite, can your homage add to his glory? |
1397 | If it be uncertain or equivocal, how is he to find in it what it has not? |
1397 | If it is not sufficient, why did he make it imperfect?" |
1397 | If nothing hath changed in the creation, if the same means now exist which before existed, why then are not the present what former generations were? |
1397 | If partial societies have made improvements, what shall hinder the improvement of society in general? |
1397 | If such be infidelity, what then is the true faith? |
1397 | If the ancient shepherds were so studious and sagacious, how does it happen that the modern ones are so stupid, ignorant, and inattentive? |
1397 | If the faith of one man is applicable to many, what need have even you to believe? |
1397 | If the law of nature be not written, must it not become arbitrary and ideal? |
1397 | If the people perish who will nourish the army? |
1397 | If they are all equal in the sight of God, what need of mediators?--where is the priesthood? |
1397 | If this knowledge is superfluous, why should we burden ourselves with it to- day?" |
1397 | If violence and persecution are the arguments of truth, are gentleness and charity the signs of falsehood?" |
1397 | If you die to prove that two and two make four, will your death add any thing to this truth?" |
1397 | If, as you say, it emanates immediately from God, does it teach his existence? |
1397 | If, then, such vast numbers of us are in the wrong, who shall dare to say,"I am in the right?" |
1397 | In general, nothing is more important than a good elementary book; but, also, nothing is more difficult to compose and even to read: and why? |
1397 | In so many centuries, during which you have been following or altering them, what changes have your prescriptions wrought in the laws of nature? |
1397 | In some parts of Europe, indeed, reason has begun to dawn, but even there, do nations partake of the knowledge of individuals? |
1397 | In the mean time how is it possible to conduct one''s self otherwise with the people so long as they are people? |
1397 | In what consist the anathemas of heaven over this land? |
1397 | In what manner ought a society to act when two of its members fight? |
1397 | Instead of changing the course of nature, why not rather change opinions? |
1397 | Is adultery an offence in the law of nature? |
1397 | Is alms- giving a virtuous action? |
1397 | Is he free? |
1397 | Is he happy in that state? |
1397 | Is he, like you, agitated with vengeance or compassion, with wrath or repentance? |
1397 | Is it from a deliberate choice that you follow the standard of one prophet rather than another? |
1397 | Is it his hand which has overthrown these walls, destroyed these temples, mutilated these columns, or is it the hand of man? |
1397 | Is it his pride which excites murderous wars, or the pride of kings and their ministers? |
1397 | Is it his rapacity which robs the husbandman, ravages the fruitful fields, and wastes the earth, or is it the rapacity of those who govern? |
1397 | Is it not in its pursuit that thou seest me in this sequestered spot? |
1397 | Is it not the first law of God that man should live?" |
1397 | Is it not written? |
1397 | Is it the venality of his decisions which overthrows the fortunes of families, or the corruption of the organs of the law? |
1397 | Is it you who gave breath to man, that you dare take it from him? |
1397 | Is luxury a vice in the individual and in society? |
1397 | Is no other law reasonable? |
1397 | Is no other law uniform and invariable? |
1397 | Is no other law universal? |
1397 | Is not happiness also a precept of the law of nature? |
1397 | Is not theirs still more contrary to common sense and justice? |
1397 | Is paternal love a common virtue? |
1397 | Is pleasure the principal object of our existence, as some philosophers have asserted? |
1397 | Is the course of the seasons varied? |
1397 | Is the earth more fruitful, or its inhabitants more happy? |
1397 | Is the sun brighter? |
1397 | Is this also a revelation? |
1397 | It may be asked, why this distinction? |
1397 | Its precepts are then in action? |
1397 | Know you not your rights? |
1397 | May not the oval form of the egg allude to the elipsis of the orbs? |
1397 | May we not also ask, on the other hand, how can an honest woman consent to reveal them? |
1397 | Mortal, who despairest of the human race, on what profound combination of facts hast thou established thy conclusion? |
1397 | My ear, struck with the cries which resounded to the heavens, distinguished these words: What is this new prodigy? |
1397 | Now I ask the public, what kind of a man is Dr. Priestly? |
1397 | Now I ask you, sir, What has all this to do with the main question? |
1397 | Now what is Jupiter? |
1397 | Now, if man, as is evident, can persuade himself of error, what is the persuasion of man to prove? |
1397 | Of what import to thy immensity, their distinctions of parties and sects? |
1397 | On whom shall you wreak vengeance for the faults committed by your own ignorance and cupidity?" |
1397 | Or have you received them only from the chance of birth, from the empire of education and habit? |
1397 | Others exclaimed:"Where are the proofs, the witnesses of these pretended facts? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--And what labor do you perform in our society? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--Do you govern without reason? |
1397 | PEOPLE.--How, then, have you acquired these riches? |
1397 | PRIESTS.--Would you live without gods or kings? |
1397 | Pleasure, then, is not an evil, a sin, as casuists pretend? |
1397 | Q. Charity is then nothing but justice? |
1397 | Q. Dissipation and prodigality, therefore, are vices? |
1397 | Q. Improbity, therefore, is a sign of false judgment and a narrow mind? |
1397 | Q. Instruction, then, is indispensable to man''s existence? |
1397 | Q. Philosophers, then, are fallible? |
1397 | Q. Probity, then, shows an extension and justice in the mind? |
1397 | Q. Uncleanliness or filthiness is, then, a real vice? |
1397 | Requires he groans for hymns, murderers for votaries, a ravaged and desolate earth for his temple? |
1397 | Say then; how should he, whom you style your common father, receive the homage of his children murdering one another? |
1397 | Should abstinence and fasting be considered as virtuous actions? |
1397 | Should modesty be considered as a virtue? |
1397 | Should weakness and cowardice be considered as vices? |
1397 | The Bramins stopping short at these words:"How can we admit your doctrine,"said the legislator,"if you will not make it known? |
1397 | The Mussulman, Christian, Jew, are they not the elect children of God, loaded with favors and miracles? |
1397 | The legislator then asked:"Have you living witnesses of the facts?" |
1397 | The moderate and prudent men added:"Supposing all this to be true, why reveal these mysteries? |
1397 | The murdering of a man is, therefore, a crime in the law of nature? |
1397 | The world has gone thus for two thousand years; why change it now?" |
1397 | Then it is not true that the followers of the law of nature are atheists? |
1397 | Then, taking the sword:"Is this iron,"said the legislator,"softer than lead?" |
1397 | They are, therefore, really unequal? |
1397 | To thee, who art guiding stars in their orbits, what are those wormlings writhing themselves in the dust? |
1397 | True or false, what interest have we in knowing whether the world has existed six thousand, or twenty- five thousand years? |
1397 | Two strong ones then said:"Why fatigue ourselves to produce enjoyments which we may find in the hands of the weak? |
1397 | WILL THE HUMAN RACE IMPROVE? |
1397 | We have an excellent soil, and we are in want of subsistence? |
1397 | We have forgotten our own infancy, and shall we know the infancy of the world? |
1397 | What a war? |
1397 | What are the characters of the law of nature? |
1397 | What are the reciprocal duties of masters and of servants? |
1397 | What are those attributes? |
1397 | What are those virtues? |
1397 | What blind and perverse delirium disorders the spirits of the nations? |
1397 | What can more strongly resemble electricity? |
1397 | What can you expect from this dissension? |
1397 | What causes have so changed the fortunes of these countries? |
1397 | What cruel and mysterious scourge is this? |
1397 | What difference is there between a learned and a wise man? |
1397 | What difference is there between an ignorant and a silly man? |
1397 | What do you conclude from all this? |
1397 | What do you mean be domestic virtues? |
1397 | What do you mean by the word country? |
1397 | What does the word nature signify? |
1397 | What has my book in common with my person? |
1397 | What have you gained by so many battles and tears? |
1397 | What is a sin in the law of nature? |
1397 | What is economy? |
1397 | What is evil? |
1397 | What is filial love? |
1397 | What is good, according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What is man in the savage state? |
1397 | What is meant by physical good and evil, and by moral good and evil? |
1397 | What is meant by the word individual? |
1397 | What is paternal love? |
1397 | What is prudence? |
1397 | What is society? |
1397 | What is temperance? |
1397 | What is that blind fatality, which without order and without law, sports with the destiny of mortals? |
1397 | What is that fundamental principle? |
1397 | What is that precept? |
1397 | What is that unjust necessity, which confounds the effect of actions, whether of wisdom or of folly? |
1397 | What is the law of nature? |
1397 | What is the reason of it? |
1397 | What is the result? |
1397 | What is the true meaning of the word philosopher? |
1397 | What is the vice contrary to this virtue? |
1397 | What is this God of justice, who punishes blindness which he himself has made? |
1397 | What is this apostle of a God of clemency, who preaches nothing but murder and carnage? |
1397 | What is vice according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What is virtue according to the law of nature? |
1397 | What man can answer for the actions of another? |
1397 | What matters it, said the Christian, whether my ruler breaks or adores images, if he renders justice to me? |
1397 | What mortal shall dare refuse to his fellow that which nature gives him? |
1397 | What need have we of knowing what passed five or six thousand years ago, in countries we never heard of, and among men who will ever be unknown to us? |
1397 | What right has he to impose his creed on us as conqueror and tyrant? |
1397 | What tyrant ever rendered children responsible for the faults of their fathers? |
1397 | What worship do they pay to him? |
1397 | What would be the alarm were the public put in possession of the sequel of this work? |
1397 | What would be the judgments of his equal and common justice over the real universality of mankind? |
1397 | Whatever tends to cause death is, therefore, an evil? |
1397 | When among yourselves disputes arise between families and individuals, how do you reconcile them? |
1397 | When do they deceive us by ignorance? |
1397 | When do they deceive us by passion? |
1397 | When prejudice has once seized the mind, how is it to be dissipated? |
1397 | When the Gospel says,"Happy are the poor of spirit,"does it mean the ignorant and imprudent? |
1397 | When the strong has subjected the weak to his opinion, has he thereby aided the cause of truth? |
1397 | When war, famine and pestilence, have swept away the inhabitants, if the earth remains a desert, is it God who has depopulated it? |
1397 | When, sinking under famine, the people have fed on impure aliments, if pestilence ensues, is it the wrath of God which sends it, or the folly of man? |
1397 | Where are those ramparts of Nineveh, those walls of Babylon, those palaces of Persepolis, those temples of Balbec and of Jerusalem? |
1397 | Where is that divine malediction which perpetuates the abandonment of these fields? |
1397 | Where is the inconsistency which thou imputest to the justice of heaven? |
1397 | Where those husbandmen, harvests, flocks, and all the creation of living beings in which the face of the earth rejoiced? |
1397 | Wherefore are so many cities destroyed? |
1397 | Whether it was made of nothing, or of something; by itself, or by a maker, who in his turn would require another maker? |
1397 | Which are the individual virtues? |
1397 | Which are the principal branches of temperance? |
1397 | Which is the eighth character? |
1397 | Which is the fifth character? |
1397 | Which is the first? |
1397 | Which is the fourth character? |
1397 | Which is the last character of the law of nature? |
1397 | Which is the ninth character? |
1397 | Which is the second? |
1397 | Which is the seventh character? |
1397 | Which is the sixth character? |
1397 | Which is the third? |
1397 | Which is the vice contrary to science? |
1397 | Which is the vice contrary to temperance? |
1397 | Whither will this quarrel conduct you? |
1397 | Who can enlighten the ignorance of the weak? |
1397 | Who can teach the multitude to know their rights, and force their chiefs to perform their duties? |
1397 | Who, indeed will ever be able to restrain the lust of wealth in the strong and powerful? |
1397 | Who, then, is the secret enemy that devours us? |
1397 | Why are these fields, sanctified by the blood of martyrs, deprived of their ancient fertility? |
1397 | Why did this common father oblige us to believe on a less degree of evidence than you? |
1397 | Why do you say that activity is a virtue according to the law of nature? |
1397 | Why do you say that conjugal love is a virtue? |
1397 | Why do you say that justice is the fundamental and almost only virtue of society? |
1397 | Why has not this ancient population been reproduced and perpetuated? |
1397 | Why have those blessings been banished hence, and transferred for so many ages to other nations and different climes? |
1397 | Why is chastity considered a greater virtue in women than in men? |
1397 | Why is cleanliness included among the virtues? |
1397 | Why is economy a virtue? |
1397 | Why is fraternal love a virtue? |
1397 | Why is paternal tenderness a virtue in parents? |
1397 | Why murder and terrify men, instead of instructing and correcting them? |
1397 | Why so? |
1397 | Why this unanimity in one case, and this discordance in the other?" |
1397 | Why, then, do these privileged races no longer enjoy the same advantages? |
1397 | Why, then, have philosophers called the savage state the state of perfection? |
1397 | Why, then, have there been moralists who have looked upon it as a virtue and perfection? |
1397 | Will he forever shut his eyes to the light, and his heart to the admonitions of truth and reason? |
1397 | Will not my ashes long ere then be mouldering in the tomb? |
1397 | Will you strike your brothers, your relatives? |
1397 | Would you not think it a chapter from The Thousand and One Nights?" |
1397 | Ye Mussulmans, if God chastiseth you for violating the five precepts, how hath he raised up the Franks who ridicule them? |
1397 | Yes; for that inclination leads naturally to action, and it is for this reason that envy is considered a sin? |
1397 | You have reckoned simplicity of manners among the social virtues; what do you understand by that word? |
1397 | You say, p. 18, that the public will expect it from me: Where are the powers by which you make the public speak and act? |
1397 | You, whose first precept is homicide and war? |
1397 | and is not egotism contrary to the social state? |
1397 | and shall justice be rendered by the hands of piracy and avarice? |
1397 | and what becomes of nobility? |
1397 | can you suppose that truth has been first discovered to- day, and that hitherto you have been walking in error? |
1397 | did you carefully examine them? |
1397 | doth he need your aid? |
1397 | hast thou then abandoned thy faithful people? |
1397 | hath human society, since its origin, made no progress toward knowledge and a better state? |
1397 | have an infidel people then enjoyed the blessings of heaven and earth? |
1397 | have the heavens changed their laws and the earth its motion? |
1397 | how are so many sublime energies allied to so many errors? |
1397 | how has so much glory been eclipsed? |
1397 | how have so many labors been annihilated? |
1397 | how long will you mistake the true principles of morality and religion? |
1397 | if these places are desolate, if these powerful cities are reduced to solitude, is it God who has caused their ruin? |
1397 | is it thus you revere the Divinity? |
1397 | is this passionate emotion? |
1397 | is this what you call governing? |
1397 | is this wisdom? |
1397 | know you not that our ancestors conquered this land, and that your race was spared only on condition of serving us? |
1397 | or, embracing in one glance the history of the species, and judging the future by the past, hast thou shown that all improvement is impossible? |
1397 | said I, is that the earth-- the habitation of man? |
1397 | said he,"instructors of nations, is it thus that you have deceived them?" |
1397 | said they,"because a man and woman ate an apple six thousand years ago, all the human race are damned? |
1397 | say they, what matters who is our master? |
1397 | say what do these human insects, which my sight no longer discerns on the earth, appear in thy eyes? |
1397 | that it is not her cause which you defend, but that of your affections, and your prejudices? |
1397 | that they destroy the principles of your faith, and overturn the religion of your ancestors? |
1397 | that those men, more fortunate than you, have the sole privilege of wisdom? |
1397 | we are not sure of what happens near us, and shall we answer for what happens in the sun, in the moon, or in imaginary regions of space? |
1397 | what this impious altar, this sacrilegious worship? |
1397 | when the dream of life is over, what will then avail all its agitations, if not one trace of utility remains behind? |
1397 | whence proceed such fatal revolutions? |
1397 | where then is the contradiction which offends thee? |
1397 | whither have flown those ages of life and abundance?--whither vanished those brilliant creations of human industry? |
1397 | who can enumerate all the calamities of tyrannical government? |
1397 | who shall dare to fathom the depths of the Omnipotent? |
1397 | who will certify what no man comprehends? |
1397 | why exhaust ourselves in pursuing prey which eludes us in the woods or waters? |
1397 | why not apply our cares in multiplying and preserving them? |
1397 | why not collect under our hands the animals that nourish us? |
1397 | will they not perish soon enough? |
1397 | with what eye should he view your hands reeking in the blood he hath created? |