A Treatise of Human Nature

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BOOK I PART IV


gredient, which they commonly stand much
in need of, and which would serve to temper
those fiery particles, of which they are com-
posed. While a warm imagination is allowed
to enter into philosophy, and hypotheses em-
braced merely for being specious and agree-
able, we can never have any steady principles,
nor any sentiments, which will suit with com-
mon practice and experience. But were these
hypotheses once removed, we might hope to
establish a system or set of opinions, which
if not true (for that, perhaps, is too much to
be hoped for) might at least be satisfactory to
the human mind, and might stand the test of
the most critical examination. Nor should we
despair of attaining this end, because of the
many chimerical systems, which have succes-
sively arisen and decayed away among men,
would we consider the shortness of that period,

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