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There is no stunning confutation of his nonsense before men and angels.
"The confutation of my philosophy has just appeared," Seaworthy said.
Some day you will meet the confutation of your philosophy," Finnegan said.
But if we would have a more philosophical confutation of this theory, perhaps the two following reflections may suffice.
It was evidently of no use to attempt a confutation of this, and the subject dropped.
Perhaps their indifference may seem wise, for such an opinion may appear to need no confutation.
One would thus have a "pure" state of capitalist society where Marx's exploitation theory and its main supposed confutation were both true.
The thought of authors and readers burning up the telephone wires with a bit of confutation is giddying.
A Confutation of the Hopes of the Jews, 1707.
A reply - rejoinder - confutation - and justification - followed in the columns of a Democratic Gazette.
A Confutation of .
In 1701 appeared A Confutation of Popery in three parts.
The Attempt was also answered in a Confutation (Dublin, 1769, 2 vols.)
Confutation of the Anabaptists, London, n. d.
A brief Confutation of the Pretences against Natural and Revealed Religion,' 1702.
It was intended to be a defense of the Augsburg Confession and a refutation of the Confutation.
In 1705 Bennet also published A Confutation of Quakerism.
More's "Confutation of Tyndale's Answer" is a classic of this vituperative genre.
The Roman Confutation (1530), in an English translation, compares each articles of the confession to Catholic beliefs.
The Confutation of Tyndale's Answer (with Louis Schuster et al.).
A Modest Confutation of (Milton's) Animadversions (1642).
Robert Crowley wrote a Confutation, London, 1548, 8vo, with which the whole of Huggarde's poem was reprinted.
Pilkington was rattled and responded with a "Confutation of an Addition" (1563), an uncompromising onslaught on the Catholic church.
"A Confutation of Convergent Realism", Philosophy of Science, Vol.
The 'Confutation' was answered in 1579 by Dr. William Fulke 2. '