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Church of St Mary the Great where the Hulsean Lectures were originally held. The Hulsean Lectures were established from an endowment made by John Hulse to the University of Cambridge in 1790. [1] At present, they consist of a series of four to eight lectures given by a university graduate on some branch of Christian theology.
The prominent ministry of Raffles in Liverpool lasted till 24 February 1862—he avoided politics, though he had liberal principles. He received the degree of LL.D. from Marischal College, Aberdeen, on 22 December 1820, when his testimonials were signed by the Dukes of Sussex and Somerset; and in July 1830 the degree of D.D. from Union College, U.S.A. [1]
In 2014–2015, Abu Yaareb al-Marzouki published a critical Arabic translation of the lectures in two volumes. These were re-titled Dialectic of Religion and Enlightenment and Genesis of Human and Religious Perception. Abu Yaareb relied on Lasson's edition for the editorial process and on Suhrkamp Verlag's copy for the general layout. He gave ...
Lectures on the Proofs of the Existence of God, tr. P.C. Hodgson 2007; Lectures on the History of Philosophy (Berlin, 1820s), 3 volumes, tr. E. S. Haldane and F. Simson 1892–96, reprinted 1995 pb. A more accurate version of volume 3 is published as Lectures on the History of Philosophy: The Lectures of 1825-26.
‘A Reply to Mr. Brougham's Practical Observations upon the Education of the People,’ 1825. ‘The Nature and Extent of the Christian Dispensation with reference to the Salvability of the Heathen,’ 1827. ‘A Scriptural Inquiry into the Nature and Import of the Image and Likeness of God in Man,’ 1830.
1819 – Hector Davies Morgan A Compressed View of the Religious Principles and Practices of the Age [11] 1820 – Godfrey Faussett The Claims of the Established Church to exclusive attachment and support, and the Dangers which menace her from Schism and Indifference, considered; 1821 – John Jones The Moral Tendency of Divine Revelation
Course of Popular Lectures is two published collections of 19th-century lectures given in the United States on religion, church influence in politics, morality, slavery, and sexism. The lectures were written and given in 1828 and 1836 by Frances Wright. [1] The collection includes two volumes:
Lectures on the Religion of the Semites. Second and Third Series, edited with an introduction by John Day (Sheffield Academic 1995). Based on the 'newly discovered' original lecture notes of William Robertson Smith; only the first series had been prepared for publication (1889, 2d ed. 1894) by the author. (Editor's Introduction at 11–13).