Authority Cited: Clarke
Author name and dates: Samuel Clarke (1675-1729)
BKG Bio-tweet: Anti-trinity cleric; significant philosopher between Locke and Berkeley on revealed and natural religion
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: Two S. Clarke cites in 1755 Dict. vol.1, one Clarke cite in 1755 Dict. vol. 2. No S. Clarke cites were identified as added to the 1773 Dict. The edition used by SJ for the three citations in the 1755 Dict. is unknown. The Sale Catalogue of Samuel Johnson's Library, A Facsimile Edition, Fleeman, ed. contains the following: Lot 242 8. Clarke's Sermons &c.; Lot 251 10. Clarke's Sermons, &c.]
Author name and dates: Samuel Clarke (1675-1729)
BKG Bio-tweet: Anti-trinity cleric; significant philosopher between Locke and Berkeley on revealed and natural religion
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: Two S. Clarke cites in 1755 Dict. vol.1, one Clarke cite in 1755 Dict. vol. 2. No S. Clarke cites were identified as added to the 1773 Dict. The edition used by SJ for the three citations in the 1755 Dict. is unknown. The Sale Catalogue of Samuel Johnson's Library, A Facsimile Edition, Fleeman, ed. contains the following: Lot 242 8. Clarke's Sermons &c.; Lot 251 10. Clarke's Sermons, &c.]
- A letter to Mr. Dodwell; wherein all the arguments in his Epistolary discourse against the immortality of the soul are particularly answered, and the judgment of the fathers concerning that matter truly represented. Together with a Defense of an argument made use of in the above-mentioned Letter to Mr. Dodwell, to prove the immateriality and natural immortality of the soul. In Four Letters to the Author of Some Remarks on a pretended Demonstration of the Immateriality and Natural Immortality of the Soul, in Dr Clark's Answer to Mr Dodwell's late Epistolary Discourse, &c. To which is added, some reflections on that Part of a book called Amyntor, or the defense of Milton's life, which relates to the Writings of the Primitive Fathers, and the Canon of the New Testament. By Samuel Clarke, D. D. Rector of St James's Westminster, 1718 [also 1731], London : printed by Will. Botham; for James Knapton, at the Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard; supervive (p.8) [Also on p.723 of the Works of Samuel Clarke, the first title page is A Paraphrase on the Four Evangelists, 1738, Printed for John and Paul Knapton in Ludgate-Street]
- Sermon CV, Against False Pretences to Religion in Works of Samuel Clarke, 1738; Printed for John and Paul Knapton in Ludgate-Street; fidelity (inexact quote - in text: "...mistaking the very meaning of the word faith, apprehending it to mean credulity instead of fidelity...."; in Dict.: "They mistake credulity for fidelity");
- Sermon LXXVI How the Law is said to be the Strength of Sin in Works of Samuel Clarke, 1738; Printed for John and Paul Knapton in Ludgate-Street; ; justification (definition based on inexact quote)
- Clarke, S. (no work cited); [BKG Note: Yale Vol. 18, p. 290, n.1, indicates "credulity" and "justification" are the headwords for the Samuel Clarke cites. "Credulity" is in the quotation under "fidelity."]