of the Defign. 



LIB.YIL THE EA&TITION OF MORAL KNOWLEDGE, INTO THE 



"Indivi- 

 dualSj 

 or ver- 

 tues 



..f.,„.r 



rsimple 



r Perpetuity. 

 ^Variety. 



„ rr rConfervativeGood. 

 7'#^^ IPerfeftive Good. 



fCeneral C Prof ejjionf^ Sec. 



•Of Com- ! r) Duties of^Oeconomcal^ 



munion, "? ^C/p^-g^ c.Polittcal duties. 



\ or'/he *^ or Duties '^fi^iz»e J rlmpoftHres^fraudf^ caU' 



'* ki^dsof gJVices^ ////, &c. 



^ ^Of profejfions. 



Good 



^ Plat- ^*P- ^ 

 formo£^ '^'^'^ 

 Good. 

 Cap. I. 



Individ. & 

 commoa 



Singly and irref^e&ively taken. 

 ) /Man and Man. 



\Coffiparatweljf\CaCe and Cafe. 

 between ^Publick and Private. 

 . >i^|me and Time. 



I At T> CHonefty. § Profit. § Pleafure. 

 Comp^tred, '''; '^/ ^^^Oeody. § Mind.^ Fortune. 

 gncs of Good of ^Contemplative. A^ive Good. 



r Arras. ^ Letters* 

 fltt/preffed by N«*«re?^2 Contemplative. § 

 I ZAftivecourfe oflife. 



or tempos. 



\^It»pos'd by' 



.Chance oj <.^^^^^^Yi. § Beauty, &c. 



^ , /Nobility. V Honours, 

 Fortune |j^ichcs. § Poverty. 



Culture 

 of the 



I Mind in 

 the 

 I Cap.3. 



•i AfeBl 



»w^«././/P^^^^"'^^' P^*"' ^^^'"' ^°P^- 

 *^'*^^M Anger, Patience, Love, Hate. 



tons 



How ftirr'd. How ftill'd. 

 ordijiem- 6^ %How fecreted ? How difclofed ? 



pers^^their.la^Nature fWhat operations they produce. 



What turns they take } 



How en wrapt ? How they encountre? 



) Cwe/, or Remedies. 



•Cuftom. Exercife, Habit, Education* 

 ^Emulation, Company, Friends, Fame, 

 )Reproof, Exhortation, Laws, Books. 

 •Study, Brief Precepts hereof. 



I fBody 



{^Append. The Congruity between the Good of^ and 



i^Mind, 



CL3 



UB. vin. 



