Preston - BT100 P8 1634

t, That Goo u. fore as the body bath a different temper fothere are feverall appetites,difpofition and affeetions; fome men longs after one thing,iome afterano... ther,but thefe are but the feveral turnings of the · fenfuall appetite, (which is alfo--teene inbea£h) _ · but come to the higher part of the foule ) the a&ions of the will and underftanding ofman, and they are ofan higher nature; the acts which .they doe have no .dependence upon the body at all. Befides, come to the motions of the body; the foure guides andmoves the body; as a Pilotdotha.ibip, n~w the Pilot maybefafe, though the flup be fpht uppn tbeRock.)Looke on bea!l:s, they arc led wholly as their appetite carries thcm,and the¥ mu!l: goe that way; there– .fore they are not ruled, as a Pilot governs a fhip :· but in men, their appetites would ~arry ~hem hither, or thither, butthewill faith no, and that bath the under!l:anding for its counfeler.So that · the motions of the body arife not from the diverfi~y ofthe fenfuall appetites, as in all other creatures, but ofthewill and·underfl:anding; for the foul depends not upon the body)but the aas ofthe body depend upon it: therefore when the body periibeth,the foule dies not; but,as a man that dwels in a boufe, ifthe houfe fall, bee ha rh nodependence Gn it, butmaygoeawaytoano- . thcr houfe ; fo the foule bath nodependence up. on the body at ali;therefore you mufi not think that itdothdye when the body per·ifheth. Befides,the foule is not worne,it is not weary, . as other:things are; the body is we.ary, and the ~ fpirits

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