Page:Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion - Hume (1779).djvu/24

 or evidence. When these topics are displayed in their full light, as they are by some philosophers and almost all divines; who can retain such confidence in this frail faculty of reason as to pay any regard to its determinations in points so sublime, so abstruse, so remote from common life and experience? When the coherence of the parts of a stone, or even that composition of parts which renders it extended; when these familiar objects, I say, are so inexplicable, and contain circumstances so repugnant and contradictory; with what assurance can we decide concerning the origin of worlds, or trace their history from eternity to eternity?

pronounced these words, I could observe a smile in the countenance both of and. That of seemed to imply an unreserved satisfaction in the doctrines delivered: But, in -