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See also: bishop of See also: Cork and See also: Ross, was See also: born in Co
.
See also: Dublin, not long after the Restoration
.
He entered Trinity See also: College, Dublin, in 1682, and after ten years' residence obtained a fellowship
.
In 1699 he was made provost of the college, and in the same See also: year published his Letter in answer to a See also: Book entitled "See also: Christianity not Mysterious," which was recognized as the ablest reply yet written to Toland
.
It expounds in germ the whole of his later theory of See also: analogy
.
In 1710 he was made bishop of Cork and Ross, which See also: post he held till his See also: death in 1735
.
In 1713 he had become somewhat notorious from his vigorous pamphleteering attack on the fashion of drinking healths, especially " to the glorious and immortal memory." His two most important See also: works are the
Procedure, Extent, and Limits of the HumanUnderstanding (1728), an able though sometimes captious critique of See also: Locke's essay, and Things Divine and Supernatural conceived by Analogy with Things Natural and Human, more briefly referred to as the Divine Analogy (1733)
.
The See also: doctrine of analogy was intended as a reply to the deistical conclusions that had been See also: drawn from Locke's theory of knowledge
.
See also: Browne holds that not only
See also: God's essence, but his attributes are inexpressible by our ideas, and can only be conceived analogically
.
This view was vigorously assailed as leading to atheism by See also: Berkeley in his See also: Alciphron (See also: Dialogue iv.), and a See also: great See also: part of the Divine Analogy is occupied with a defence against that See also: criticism
.
The bishop. emphasizes the distinction between See also: metaphor and analogy; though the conceived attributes are not thought. as they are in themselves, yet there is a reality corresponding in some way to our ideas of them
.
His analogical arguments resemble those found in the See also: Bampton Lectures of Dean Mansel
.
Browne was a See also: man of abstemious habits, charitable disposition, and impressive eloquence
.
He died on the 27th of See also: August 1735
.
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