Date: May 10, 1704
"Whether a tincture of malice in our natures makes us fond of furnishing every bright idea with its reverse, or whether reason, reflecting upon the sum of things, can, like the sun, serve only to enlighten one half of the globe, leaving the other half by necessity under shade and darkness, or whe...
preview | full record— Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745)
Date: May 10, 1704
"Now I would gladly be informed how it is possible to account for such imaginations as these in particular men, without recourse to my phenomenon of vapours ascending from the lower faculties to overshadow the brain, and there distilling into conceptions, for which the narrowness of our ...
preview | full record— Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745)
Date: May 10, 1704
"Besides, the eyes of the understanding see best when those of the senses are out of the way, and therefore blind men are observed to tread their steps with much more caution, and conduct, and judgment than those who rely with too much confidence upon the virtue of the visual nerve, which every l...
preview | full record— Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745)
Date: 1705, 1712
"If Reason must not judge of Faith's true light, / How came our Guides to know the wrong from right, / Or, how their rev'rend Heads distinguish plain, / Betwixt the Bible and the Alchoran."
preview | full record— Ward, Edward (1667-1731)
Date: 1705, 1712
"Reason's the heav'nly Ray that lights the Soul, / And the Faith dark that does its Power controul."
preview | full record— Ward, Edward (1667-1731)
Date: 1706
"Every one declares against blindness, and yet who almost is not fond of that which dims his sight, and keeps the clear light out of his mind, which should lead him into truth and knowledge?"
preview | full record— Locke, John (1632-1704)
Date: 1706
In the association of ideas "unnatural connections become by custom as natural to the mind, as sun and light"
preview | full record— Locke, John (1632-1704)
Date: 1706 [first published 1658]
"To Dazzle, to hurt the Sight, with too muc Light, to surprize the Mind; to tempt, to decoy, to beguile."
preview | full record— Phillips, Edward (1630-1696)
Date: 1706 [first published 1658]
"Luciferous, that brings Light: as Luciferous Experiments, a Term us'd by Naturlaists, for such Experiments as serve to inform and inlighten the Mind, about some Truth of Speculation in Physick or Philosophy."
preview | full record— Phillips, Edward (1630-1696)
Date: 1706
"Let us make a Trial, Whether they that have been Scorched and Blacken'd by the Sun of Africa, may not come to have their Minds Healed by the more Benign Beams of the Sun of Righteousness."
preview | full record— Mather, Cotton (1663-1728)