A (D GENERAL PHYSICS. CONSIDERED WITH REFERENCE TO NATURAL THEOLOGY. Et hæc Deo, de quo utique ex phænominis disserere ad philosophy Newton, Conclusion of the Principia. BY THE REV. WILLIAM WHEWELL, FELLOW AND TUTOR OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS 329 & 331 PEARL STREET, FRANKLIN SQUARE. 185 6. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE AND RIGHT REVEREND CHARLES JAMES, LORD BISHOP OF LONDON. MY LORD 1 owe it to you that I was se.ected for the task attempted in the following pages, a distinction which I feel to be honourable; and on this account alone I should have a peculiar pleasure in dedicating the work to your lordship. I do so with additional gratification on another account: the Treatise has been written within the walls of the College of which your lordship was formerly a resident member, and its merits, if it have any, are mainly due to the spirit and habits of the place. The society is always pleased and proud to recollect that a person of the eminent talents and high character of your lordship is one of its members; and I am persuaded that any effort in the cause of letters and religion coming from that quarter, will have for you an interest beyond what it would otherwise possess. The subject proposed to me was limited: my prescribed object is to lead the friends of religion to look with confidence and pleasure on the progress |