The Newtonians and the English Revolution, 1689-1720 |
Contents
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Introduction | 15 |
Latitudinarian Social Theory and the | 22 |
Copyright | |
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accepted Anglican antichrist argued arguments atheism Barrow believed bishop Boyle lectures Boyle lectureship Boyle's Bruno Burnet Cambridge Christ Christianity church circles churchmen Cressener destruction Diary divine doctrines early earth ecclesiastical eighteenth century England English evidence Fatio fear Finch freethinkers Henry History Hobbes Ibid intellectual interest Isaac Barrow Isaac Newton John Evelyn John Tillotson John Toland Lambeth Palace Library latitudinarians Leibniz Locke London low-churchmen manuscript Masonic matter mechanical philosophy millenarian millennium moderate moral motion MSS ADD natural order natural philosophy natural religion Newtonian natural philosophy Oxford preached principles prosperity Protestant Protestantism providential plan radicals reason Reformation reign of Anne religious Restoration revealed Revolution Richard Bentley Robert Boyle Royal Society Sacred Theory Samuel Clarke Scriptural prophecies self-interest sermons seventeenth century Simon Patrick social and political social ideology Spinoza stability Stillingfleet Thomas Tenison Tillotson tion tonian universe Wilkins William Lloyd William Whiston world natural world politick