Carroll, William
Carroll, William, fl. 1700
Carroll, William, active 1700
VIAF ID: 79095322 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/79095322
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Carroll ‡b William
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Carroll, William
- 100 1 _ ‡a Carroll, William ‡d fl. 1700
- 100 1 _ ‡a Carroll, William, ‡d active 1700
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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A dissertation upon the tenth chapter of the fourth book of Mr Locke's Essay concerning humane understanding : 1706 | |
A letter to the Reverend Dr. Benjamin Prat, ... wherein, the dangerous errors in a late book, intituled, An essay concerning the use of reason in propositions ... are detected, confuted, and gradually deduc'd from the very basis of all atheism, upon which alone they are bottom'd. By William Caroll | |
Remarks upon Mr. Clarke's sermons, preached at St. Paul's against Hobbs, Spinoza, and other atheists. Wherein 'tis Demonstrated: I. That Mr. C. by the Sceptical Hypothesis he imploys, Absolutely cuts off all Possible Means of Knowing the Nature, or of Proving the Existence of the One Only True God, against Hobbs, Spinoza, or any other Atheists whatever. II. That in Reference to God, or Spirits, he reduces Humane Understanding, to the most Incurable State of Scepticism. These Two Particulars are Handl'd and Prov'd Geometrically. III. The Reasons are produced which convince the Author of this Paper, that those Sermons do rather Establish than Destroy, do rather Confirm than Confute Spinoza's Hypothesis | |
Spinoza reviv'd. | |
Spinoza reviv'd : or, a treatise, proving the book, entitled, The rights of the Christian church, &c. (in the most notorious parts of it) to be the same with Spinoza's rights of the Christian clergy, &c. and that both of them are grounded upon downright atheism. To which is added, A preliminary discourse relating to the said books, By the Reverend Dr. George Hicks | |
Spinoza reviv'd : Part the second. Or, a letter to Monsieur Le Clerc, occasion'd by his Bibliotheque choisie, Tom. 21. Wherein Her Majesty's prerogative, and the authority of Parliaments, are defended. As also A Full Confutation of the many Calumnies which the said Monsieur Le Clerc hath endeavour'd to throw on the Learned and Reverend Persons that wrote against the Seditious and Atheistical Principles, in a Book entituled, The Rights of the Christian Church Asserted, &c. By William Carrol |