Of the Simplicity, Unchangeableness, Incorruptibility, &c. of his Nature
Of the Manner of our conceiving the Immensity of God
PROP. VII. That the Self-existent Being must of necessity be but One
The Error of Spinoza concerning one Uniform Substance
That the Material World cannot possibly have been Self-existent
PROP. IX. That the Self-existent and Original Cause of all Things is not a
Necessary Agent, but a Being indued with Liberty and Choice
This Proposition a necessary consequent of the foregoing
Proved further from the Arbitrary Disposition of Things in the World, with
a full answer to Spinoza's arguments for the necessity of all things
Also from Final Causes
And from the Finiteness of Created Beings
And from the Impossibility of an Infinite Succession of Causes
That Liberty is not in itself an Impossible and contradictory Notion
PROP. X. That the Self-existing Being, the Supreme cause of all things,
must of necessity have Infinite Power
Of working Contradictions, and Natural or Moral Evil
Of the Power of creating Matter
Of the Power of creating immaterial Cogitative Substances, and those in-
dued with Liberty of Will or Choice