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JOHN HUTCHINSON (1674-1737)

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 13 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN HUTCHINSON (1674-1737)  ,
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English theological writer, was born at Spennithorne,
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Yorkshire, in 1674 . He served as steward in several families of position, latterly in that of the duke of Somerset, who ultimately obtained for him the
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post of
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riding purveyor to the master of the horse, a sinecure worth about £200 a
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year . In 1700 he became acquainted with Dr John Woodward (1665–1728) physician to the duke and author of a
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work entitled The Natural
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History of the Earth, to whom he entrusted a large number of fossils of his own
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collecting, along with a mass of
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manuscript notes, for arrangement and publication . A misunderstanding as to the manner in which these should be dealt with was the immediate occasion of the publication by Hutchinson in 1724 of Moses's Principia,
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part i., in which Woodward's Natural History was bitterly ridiculed, his conduct with regard to the mineralogical specimens not obscurely characterized, and a refutation of the Newtonian
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doctrine of gravitation seriously attempted . It was followed by part ii. in 1727, and by various other
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works, including Moses's Sine Principio, 173o; The Confusion of Tongues and Trinity of the Gentiles, 1731; Power Essential and
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Mechanical, or what power belongs to
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God and what to his creatures, in which the design of
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Sir I . Newton and Dr
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Samuel Clarke is laid open, 1732; Glory or Gravity, 1733; The Religion of Satan, or Antichrist Delineated, 1736 . He taught that the Bible contained the elements not only of true religion but also of all rational philosophy . He held that the
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Hebrew must be read without points, and his interpretation rested largely on fanciful symbolism . Bishop George Horne of Norwich was during some of his earlier years an avowed Hutchinsonian; and William Jones of Nayland continued to be so to the end of his
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life . A
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complete edition of his publications, edited by Robert Spearman and
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Julius Bate, appeared in 1748 (12 vols.); an Abstract of these followed in 1753; and a Supplement, with Life by Spearman pre-fixed, in 1765 .

End of Article: JOHN HUTCHINSON (1674-1737)
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