Nathaniel Culverwell

Nathaniel Culverwell (alternative spellings Nathanael or Culverwel; 1619–1651) was an English author and theologian, born in Middlesex. He was baptized on 14 January 1619 at the church of St. Margaret Moses where his father was rector. He was the second of six children of Richard and Margaret (Horton) Culverwell.[1]

A student (admitted 1633) and later a fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge,[2] he was associated with members of the Cambridge Platonists group.

Works

  • Spiritual Optics, or a Glass Discovering the Weakness and Imperfection of a Christian's Knowledge in this Life, 1651
  • An Elegant and Learned Discourse of the Light of Nature, 1652 – His best-known work, this was originally delivered as a series of lectures in 1645–1646, and attempted mediation between reason and faith, via natural law, in the context of the opposing religious stances of the English Civil War.
  • Worth of Souls
  • The Schisme
  • Act of Oblivion
  • Child's Return
  • Panting Soul
  • Mount Ebal
  • White Stone
gollark: The main issue is probably chunkloading, since drones need to, well, move through the air to get places.
gollark: Anyway, for drone swarms I recommend just screnching them and stealing them, or failing that (I mean, you could do both), hijacking the drone swarm and sending it against your enemies.
gollark: If a drone is going around ramming you you can just scrench it. If a drone drops HECf-251 on you, it can go high enough that you can't see it, drop it once, and fly away before you know what happened.
gollark: Yes, and it's very hard to defend against.
gollark: It has radars. By default those can only get your distance, but there's an option for providing coords and trilateration is a thing.

References

  1. Family and baptism information from The New England Historical and Genealogical Register of April 1994, p. 124.
  2. "Culverwell, Nathaniel (CLVL633N)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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