Table of Contents
New
Stuff
Past
Issues
Entry
Page
Toon
Dig
Prehistoric
Matinee Theatre
Who
Are We?
The
Real Story
Guest
Entry Log
Linkage
Contact
the Fools
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Chatter Box
A Quadrilateral Quiver of Quasi-Quaint
yet Quirky Quotations
WDJS?
(What
Did Jefferson Say?)
"I hold (without appeal
to revelation) that when we take a view of the universe, in all
its parts, general or particular, it is impossible for the human
mind not to perceive and feel a conviction of design, consummate
skill, and indefinite power in every atom of its composition.
The movements
of the heavenly bodies, so exactly held in their course by the
balance of centrifugal and centripetal forces; the structure
of our earth itself, with its distribution of lands, waters and
atmosphere; animal and vegetable bodies, examined in all their
minutest particles; insects, mere atoms of life, yet as perfectly
organized as man or mammoth; the mineral substances, their generation
and uses; it is impossible, I say, for the human mind not to
believe, that there is in all this, design, cause, and effect,
up to an ultimate cause, a fabricator of all things from matter
and motion, their preserver and regulator while permitted to
exist in their present forms, and their regeneration into new
and other forms.
We see, too,
evident proofs of the necessity of a superintending power to
maintain the universe in its course and order.
Stars, well
known, have disappeared, new ones have come into view; comets
in their incalculable courses, may run foul of suns and planets,
and require renovation under other laws; certain races of animals
are become extinct; and were there no restoring power, all existences
might extinguish successively, one by one, until all should be
reduced to a shapeless chaos.
So irresistible
are these evidences of an intelligent and powerful agent, that,
of the infinite numbers of men who have existed through all time,
they have believed, in the proportion of a million at least to
a unit, in the hypothesis of an eternal pre-existence of a Creator,
rather than in that of a self-existent universe."

Thomas Jefferson
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