Project Gutenberg 2015-12-18 Public domain in the USA. 106 Briggs, Samuel 1841 1904 Alcofribas Nasier, the Later De Tribus Impostoribus, A. D. 1230: The Three Impostors Translated (with notes and comments) from a French manuscript of the work written in the year 1716, with a dissertation on the original treatise and a bibliography of the various editions Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) "De Tribus Impostoribus, A. D. 1230: The Three Impostors" by Samuel Briggs is a philosophical treatise likely composed in the early 14th century. The work engages critically with religious figures and doctrines, particularly focusing on Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad, whom it refers to as "the three impostors." Through a blend of historical commentary and skepticism, the author explores the origins and motivations of these influential figures in religion. At the start of the treatise, the author sets the stage for an in-depth critique of historical religious figures and their perceived fabrications. The opening portion highlights the questionable foundations of their respective doctrines, suggesting that these figures employed manipulative tactics to maintain power and influence over their followers. The narrative begins with reflections on the general ignorance of the masses, establishing a theme of deception perpetrated by religious leaders throughout history, and raises thought-provoking questions about the nature of divinity, religion, and the power dynamics at play. (This is an automatically generated summary.) en Rationalism De tribus impostoribus -- Bibliography BL Text Browsing: Philosophy & Ethics Browsing: Religion/Spirituality/Paranormal 429426 429380 2024-09-21T08:57:04.064172 2023-09-22T06:18:32.056961 text/html text/html 408592 2015-12-18T05:04:58 text/html; charset=us-ascii 334699 2015-12-18T05:04:58 text/html; charset=us-ascii application/zip 345492 2024-09-21T08:57:16.583079 application/epub+zip 368244 2024-09-21T08:57:07.682145 application/epub+zip 221592 2024-09-21T08:57:05.634159 application/epub+zip 601073 2024-09-21T08:57:22.263048 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 529774 2024-09-21T08:57:14.973103 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 299412 2022-09-23T04:56:05.253017 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 258901 258664 2024-09-21T08:57:01.929189 2023-09-22T06:18:30.263967 text/plain; charset=us-ascii text/plain 258990 2015-12-18T05:04:54 text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 98664 2015-12-18T05:04:58 text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 application/zip 258981 2015-12-18T05:04:54 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 98554 2015-12-18T05:04:58 text/plain; charset=us-ascii application/zip 20234 2024-09-21T08:57:22.411080 application/rdf+xml 17126 2024-09-21T08:57:06.225144 image/jpeg 2408 2024-09-21T08:57:06.138139 image/jpeg 327055 2024-09-21T08:57:04.121185 application/octet-stream application/zip Archives containing the RDF files for *all* our books can be downloaded at https://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Gutenberg:Feeds#The_Complete_Project_Gutenberg_Catalog