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2 
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HARMONY. 
tion of their refpective harmonies. Dr. Prieftley, in a 
work of this vos publifhed in 1777, has adopted the 
r. Mann, in his Differtations on the 
on propofed 
fa of the Birth and Death of Chrift, and ftrenuoufly 
: 1 
opition to the sy ileneiae: See rigen. De rincip. 
3 
ty 
wn 
2 
rin 2) 
: oo 
6 5a 
wri 
a 
& 
la 
ad 
o 
° 5 
. 
oa 
‘eal 
° 
ed. Sylb. vel. apud Oper. tom. 1. 
I. Ox xon. Tren. ib. i. ee 3. num. 3. Tertull. lib. 
Lares publithed 
in “Es that this petiod of one year is much too fhort for 
guments to prove the more common opinion felt 4 
by Eufebius, viz. that our Lord’s miniftry Miata Tehgee 
Lint Of a half, and iaelaed in that {pace of time four 
ir Ifaac Newton is of opinion, that our Lord's 
pane 
nee fncladad five pees ; the firft of which happened 
-D 
the fecond £ ; the third A. D. 32; the 
; the ffth on » iday: April 23, A. D. 
| one another, 
us, &e., have ices againft the not idiy, 
OS iver 1s fuppofed to have had a view to the gravita- 
tion of celeitial bodies, in what he aie concerning the 
ny of the {pheres. 
oe \ mufical chord eyes 
feom the fun 
the fquare 
es Tf cet og hog eee fuppofe mufical chords 
to extend h planet, that all thefe chords 
would 
star of bya and oF ee 
fenfatio 
derived. Plin. lib. ii. cap. 22. Macrob. in Somn. Scrip. 
a ii. cap. 1. Plutarch de Animal. Procreatione, é. Timzo. 
See Maclaurin’s View of Cit ce s Difcov. book i. chap. i. 
. 32. ed. 4to. See Grav 
Harmony, presheblific a celebrated fyftem of M. 
Leibnitz, by means wher accounts for the union or, 
communication betw een ' 
as) 
the foul a 
only have an apparent one, whereo 
. Leibnitz, unfatisfied with either of thefe hy pothefes,’ 
eftablithes athird. A foul or fpirit, he cat oe is to have a’ 
certain feries of thoughts, defi He and wi a body, which’ 
is only a machine, is to have a ertain feries of motions, to be 
determined by the pd eas pty its mechanical difpofition 
with the impreffions of external objects. 
If, now, there be tiger foul and body fo framed, that the’ 
whole feries of wills e foul, and the whole feries of 
motions of the body, etsy cotrefpond ; ; and = the fame 
aes for inftance, when the boul defires to go t place, 
the two feet move mechanically that way ; chia Goal and 
Woity 3 Ww vill oe a relation to one another, not any actual 
union en them, but the spire and tees 
= conrefpendene of the feveral a€tions o : ow, 
puts together this foul and body, which tad fuch a cerre-’ 
pondence antecedent to their union; fuch a pre-eftablithed 
harmony. And the fame is to be underftood of all other' 
fouls and bodies that have been, or ever will be join 
In effe&, the laws of motion in the body, newer in’ > 
the order éf efficient caufes, do alfo agree and correfpond 
with the ideas of the foul ; 
a&t at the time when the wills. So that vpon this 
hypothefis, the volitions of ri mind are followed inftantly 
by the defired motions of the y, not in confequence of 
thofe yolitions in the leaft, but of the nice and well- adj jufted 
caufes of a different kind ; 
a is no more than the he efiett fe exquifite haghiie 
The fame principle he extends Ales r, and makes a pre- 
eftablifhed harmony between the kingdoms of nature and 
Alfo, a village 
which and Citas elaware river, diftant 18 miles 
E.S E. there is a portage ; about 140 miles N. ds: Wee 
Philadelphia. N. lat. 44° the 
analo 
the imprefhions receiv 
imp. 
