Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 29Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 25
... language , we may say , that the Bible can employ , and does employ most copiously , the first and the third ; but it cannot make use of the second . " The reason is , that the adoption of scientific language , as above defined , would ...
... language , we may say , that the Bible can employ , and does employ most copiously , the first and the third ; but it cannot make use of the second . " The reason is , that the adoption of scientific language , as above defined , would ...
Page 26
... language of Moses than would have been the cycles and epicyles , and other technics of the exploded Ptolemaic science ? Ages hence , too , how much more truthful may it be felt to be , than our gravities , our centripetal and ...
... language of Moses than would have been the cycles and epicyles , and other technics of the exploded Ptolemaic science ? Ages hence , too , how much more truthful may it be felt to be , than our gravities , our centripetal and ...
Page 27
... language , the phenomenal , the poetic , and the scientific , -- on a right appreciation of which depends all sound interpretation of the word of God . We now proceed to the examination of the record , as it is pre- sented to us in the ...
... language , the phenomenal , the poetic , and the scientific , -- on a right appreciation of which depends all sound interpretation of the word of God . We now proceed to the examination of the record , as it is pre- sented to us in the ...
Contents
ARTICLE PAGE I THEORY OF THE BEAUTIFUL | 3 |
THE SIX DAYS OF CREATION | 21 |
IIILA BORDES INTRODUCTION TO PHYSIOLOGY | 51 |
Copyright | |
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