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Samuel Clarke

    October 11, 1675 – May 17, 1729

    Samuel Clarke was an English philosopher and Anglican clergyman, considered the major British philosophical figure between John Locke and George Berkeley. His work engaged deeply with metaphysics and ethics, often in conversation with the scientific advancements of his era. Clarke sought to synthesize rational thought with religious faith, leaving a significant legacy within Enlightenment philosophy. His influence shaped debates on the nature of God, free will, and the foundations of morality for subsequent thinkers.

    A General Martyrologie, Containing a Collection of All the Greatest Persecutions
    A Collection of the Sweet Assuring Promises of Scripture: Or, the Believers' Inheritance
    An Apology for Dr. Clarke: Containing an Account of the Late Proceedings in Convocation Upon His Writings Concerning the Trinity: Being a Collect
    The Works Of Samuel Clarke: Sermons On Several Subjects. Eighteen Sermons On Several Occasions. Sixteen Sermons On The Being And Attributes Of God
    A Collection of the Promises of Scripture, Under Their Proper Heads: In two Parts, Representing I. The Blessings Promised, II. The Duties to Which Pro
    Sermons; Volume 9