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SUPPOSED TO BE ESSENTIAL TO MORAL AGENCY, VIRTUE AND VICE, REWARD AND PUNISHMENT, PRAISE AND BLAME.
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ROM. IX. 16. IT IS NOT OF HIM THAT WILLETH.
NEW YORK:
PUBLISHED BY LEAVITT & ALLEN,
379 BROADWAY.
1858.
Reclass
10-28-44 NS O
CONTENTS OF VOLUME II.
1. A CAREFUL AND STRICT INQUIRY INTO THE PREVAILING NO
TIONS OF THE FREEDOM OF THE WILL.
PAGE
PART I. Wherein are explained and stated various terms and things belong
ng to the subject of the ensuing Discourse
1
SECT. I. Concerning the Nature of the Will
II. Concerning the Determination of the Will
ib.
3
t. Concerning the meaning of the terms, Necessity, Impossibility, Inability,
&c., and of Contingence
8
13
17
Iv. Of the distinction of natural and moral Necessity, and Inability
v. Concerning the notion of Liberty, and of moral Agency
PART II. Wherein it is considered, whether there is or can be any suca sort of
Freedom of Will, as that wherein Arminians place the essence of the Lib-
erty of all Moral Agents; and whether any such thing ever was or can be
conceived of
SECT. I. Showing the manifest inconsistence of the Arminian notion of Liberty
of Will, consisting in the Will's self-determining Power
IV. Whether Volition can arise without a Cause, through the activity of the
nature of the soul
26
30
11. Several supposed ways of evading the foregoing reasoning, considered III. Whether any Event whatsoever, and Volition in particular, can come tc pass without a Cause of its existence
7. Showing, that if the things asserted in these Evasions should be supposed
to be true, they are altogether impertinent, and cannot help the cause of
Arminian Liberty; and how, this being the state of the case, Arminian
writers are obliged to talk inconsistently
VI. Concerning the Will determining in things which are perfectly indifferent
VII. Concerning the notion of Liberty of Will, consisting in Indifference
VIII. Concerning the supposed Liberty of the Will, as opposite to all Necessity 45
IX. Of the Connection of the Acts of the Will with the Dictates of the Under-
standing
49
x. Volition necessarily connected with the influence of Motives: with partic
ular observations of the great inconsistence of Mr. Chubb's assertions and
reasonings about the Freedom of the Will
xt. The evidence of God's certain Foreknowledge of the Volitions of moral
Agents
52
6.
*11. God's certain Foreknowledge of the future volitions of moral agents, in-
consistent with such a Contingence of those volitions as is without all Ne-
cessity
73
XIII. Whether we suppose the volitions of moral Agents to be connected with
any thing antecedent, or not, yet they must be necessary in such a sense as
to overthrow Arminian Liberty
PART III. Wherein is inquired, whether any such Liberty of Will as Arminians
hold be necessary to Mora! Agency, Virtue and Vice, Praise and Dis-
praise, &c.
SECT. I. God's moral Excellency necessary, yet virtuous and praiseworthy
. The Acts of the Will of the human soul of Jesus Christ, necessarily holy,
yet truly virtuous, praiseworthy. rewardable, &c.