The philosopher and literary author Isaac Taylor (1787 1865)
published this book anonymously in 1836. The work is a development
of two earlier works: Saturday Evening (1832) and Natural History
of Enthusiasm (1829), all three attempts to provide a philosophy to
deal with the major problems and spiritual questions of the day.
The popularity of Physical Theory led to Taylor relinquishing his
previous anonymity. The work is a religious and philosophically
speculative exploration of the possible paths of knowledge to
information regarding the future existence of human beings. Taylor
believed that knowledge of the human physical constitution could be
used to conjecture information about the modes of human eternal
life and eternity's scheme of moral duties. The work was very
popular among contemporaries and offers today an important insight
into Victorian intellectual life. It is a rich source for
historians of nineteenth-century religious philosophy.
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