134 



CHAP. IV. 



Of the Soul, and of the Origin of Man. 



1. There is something in Man which perceives the various Mo- 



tions of the Body. 



2. This Perception is sometimes continued, and recalled. 



3. We know some Things in a more sublime Manner. 



4. There is something in us which has an Appetite to sensible 



Things. 



5. And another Appetite, which is often contrary to this. 



6. How Philosophers account for the direction of our bodily Mo* 



tions. 



7. For the External Senses. 



8. The Imagination and Memory. 



9. The Understanding, Will, and Affections. 



10. This may be so, or may not. 



11. Of the Immortality of the Soul. 



12. Of the Union of the Soul and Body. 



13. Rf;spon cannot discover the Origin of Man. 



14. The Scriptural account of it. 



15. Of the production of the Soul. 

 16.. Of the Gene ration of the Body. 



* JlLVERY one finds there is something in himself 

 which perceives the motions raised in his body by 

 outward objects. For when we see, hear, taste, 

 smell, or feel, while the objects affect our bodily or- 

 gans, we iind also various perceptions in our mind, 

 according to the variety of those objects. 



2. We observe, likewise, that after the objects are 

 removed, those perceptions often continue, yea, and 

 are variously mixed and compounded together, which 



