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The grand essay: or, A vindication of reason, and religion, against impostures of philosophy : proving according to those ideas and conceptions of things human uuderstanding [sic] is capable of forming to it self. 1. That the existence of any immaterial substance is a philosophic imposture, and impossible to be conceived. 2. That all matter has originally created in it, a principle of internal, or self-motion. 3. That matter and motion must be the foundation of thought in men and brutes. To which is added, a brief answer to Mr. Broughton's Psycholo &c
Coward, William (1657?-1725)
1704
By William Coward. Publisher's advertisement: leaf O4 (1st sequence). Signatures: A⁴ B-N⁸ O⁴, N-Q⁸ R⁴. Title within double line border. Running title: Immaterial substance, a philoso...