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27.

Relations of tihngs, & yet be quite indifferent to this or yt. conduct, unless we deletion were /deletion addition had some /addition sense, or affection, which make us approve, or disapprove; love, or dislike; ye. other conduct. Undoubted Reason may perceive an Aptitude to a certain end, but with some Affection, we cannot have any idea of an End, & without which we deletion can have no /deletion addition cannot conceive any /addition inducement to action. Consequently we must know, ye. natures meant, for what Ends they are propos'd, & what affection prompt them to act, before we can deletion unterstand /deletion addition understand ye /addition Reasons, & fitnesses of things, which are said unclear ye. foundation of Morals; otherwise we are incapable of judging concerning ye. duty requir'd, or of ye. conduct of him whom we suppose under Moral Obligation. But when once ye. natures are given, & ye. relation ascertain'd, we can determine what conduct will be obligatory to such natures, & adapted to their condition & Oeconomy; yt. same conduct will be always, & unalterably proper, as long as ye. same Natures are plac'd in ye. same Relations.

ye. calling Morality a conformity to truth, gives no idea, but what is equally applicable to Vice; deletion all those /deletion addition whatever /addition deletion what [[