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And of the former of these, Diagoras, Sextus Empiricus acquaints us, That because a certain perjured Person, who had wrong'd him, lived unpunished by the Gods, he was so enraged at it, that he undertook to maintain there were no Gods at all. Lib. Adr. Mathem. Edit. Genev. 1621. The like Pride and Arrogance Lactantius tells us he found in the two great Writers that appeared against Christianity, in his time, in Bithynia. The former of these, who, 'tis probable, was the famous Porphyry, called himself Antistes Philosophiae, the Chief or Prince of Philosophers; |
And of the former of these, Diagoras, Sextus Empiricus acquaints us, That Because a certain perjured Person, who had wronged him, lived unpunished by the God's, he was so enraged At it, that he undertook to maintain there were no God's At all. Lib. Adr Mathematic. Edit. Geneva 1621. The like Pride and Arrogance Lactantius tells us he found in the two great Writers that appeared against Christianity, in his time, in Bythynia. The former of these, who, it's probable, was the famous Porphyry, called himself Antistes Philosophiae, the Chief or Prince of Philosophers; |
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