Butler's analogy, no. 6
Amherst College Digital Collections > Archives & Special Collections
Creator | Hitchcock, Edward, 1793-1864 |
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Title | Butler's analogy, no. 6 |
Dates | 1793-1864 |
Abstract | A notebook in which Edward Hitchcock has taken notes on part 2 chapters 7 and 8 of Joseph Butler's "The Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed, to the Constitution and the Course of Nature," as well as on the introductory essay by Albert Barnes published in some editions of the text. This is number six of a series of nine notebooks in which Hitchcock has taken notes on Butler's text. Hitchcock's notes consist primarily of paraphrasing Butler's text, including summaries of Butler's arguments. Hitchcock has divided his notes into sections based on "lessons" that he has identified in the chapters, with most chapters containing one or two lessons. This section of notes continues lesson 21 from the fifth notebook and contains lessons 22 through 24. |
Notes | The item is undated. Dates provided are Hitchcock's birth and death year. |
Physical Description | 1 item (25 pages) ; 16 cm |
Genre | Notebooks |
Genre | Notes |
Subject | Hitchcock, Edward, 1793-1864 – Notebooks, sketchbooks, etc. |
Subject | Hitchcock, Edward, 1793-1864 – Books and reading |
Subject | Butler, Joseph, 1692-1752. The analogy of religion, natural and revealed, to the constitution and course of nature |
Subject | Analogy (Religion) |
Subject | Natural theology |
Subject | Apologetics |
Part of | Edward and Orra White Hitchcock Papers |
Finding Aid | View the finding aid for this item's collection |
Repository | Amherst College Archives & Special Collections |
Shelf Location | Box 23 Folder 2 |
Access and Use | Public Domain: This material has been identified as being free of known restrictions under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. While Amherst College Archives & Special Collections claims no rights or authority over this material, we do ask that any publication or use of this material cite the Archives & Special Collections at Amherst College as the source of the images and the repository where the original documents can be found. |