difference between our constitution and theirs, being a difference not in degree, but in kind. Perhaps this is the single instance, in which that regular gradation, which we everywhere else observe in the universe, fails entirely.-The subject is by far too extensive to be treated in these Outlines.1 [Consult on this article, An Account of the Regular Gradation in Man, &c., by Charles White of Manchester. 1799.] -2d edit. [PART SECOND, "Of the Active and of the Moral Powers of Man," will be found at the commencement of Vol. vi.-Ed.] |