Carroll, W. (1707). A letter to the Reverend Dr. Benjamin Prat, chaplain in Ordinary to His Grace the Duke of Ormond, J.V. Professor, and fellow of Trinity College in Dublin: Wherein, the dangerous errors in a late book, intituled, An essay concerning the use of reason in propositions, the evidence whereof depends upon human testimony: are detected, confuted, and gradually deduc'd from the very basis of all atheism, upon which alone they are bottom'd. By William Caroll. Printed for Richard Sare, bookseller at Gray's-Inn-Gate; and sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationCarroll, William. A Letter to the Reverend Dr. Benjamin Prat, Chaplain in Ordinary to His Grace the Duke of Ormond, J.V. Professor, and Fellow of Trinity College in Dublin: Wherein, the Dangerous Errors in a Late Book, Intituled, An Essay Concerning the Use of Reason in Propositions, the Evidence Whereof Depends upon Human Testimony: Are Detected, Confuted, and Gradually Deduc'd from the Very Basis of All Atheism, upon Which Alone They Are Bottom'd. By William Caroll. London: Printed for Richard Sare, bookseller at Gray's-Inn-Gate; and sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1707.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationCarroll, William. A Letter to the Reverend Dr. Benjamin Prat, Chaplain in Ordinary to His Grace the Duke of Ormond, J.V. Professor, and Fellow of Trinity College in Dublin: Wherein, the Dangerous Errors in a Late Book, Intituled, An Essay Concerning the Use of Reason in Propositions, the Evidence Whereof Depends upon Human Testimony: Are Detected, Confuted, and Gradually Deduc'd from the Very Basis of All Atheism, upon Which Alone They Are Bottom'd. By William Caroll. Printed for Richard Sare, bookseller at Gray's-Inn-Gate; and sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1707.