Part II. The Living Te smile. in it is propos'd, What Things have no- thing Common between them ; How can they be Things, and have nothing Com- mon between them ? If they be Things, they have fure the general Notion of Thing Common to them. There can, therefore, be no fuch Things, that have nothitag Common. And let this be fuppo- fed, to have been abfurdly fet down on purpofe. Yet now for his Demonfira_, Lion hereof, it refts upon a palpable Falf /hood ; that Carafes, and EfeCts, muff be mutually under(iood by one another, as we thall fee more hereafter. His 4.th, we let pars ; what it bath regardable in it, being, as fitly, to be confider'd under the 5th. [There cannot be two, or more, &lb- VI,. fiances, in the whole Zlniverf of thefame Nature, or Attribute] unto which, be- fides what hath been Paid already, we need only, here, to add, that (whereas he hath told us, by the Attribute ofa Sub- fiance, he means, the Effence of it) if he here fpeak of the fame numerical Ence, or Attribute, 'tis ridiculoufly true; and is no more than ifhe had fail, One Thing, is but One Thing : If he fpeak of the fame f ecial, or general Attribute, or El:- fence, 'tis as abfurdly falfe. And, for the Proof of it, in the latter Senfe, his De- pion ration 7
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