Browne, Peter
BROWNE, PETER: Protestant Irish bishop;
b. in County Dublin soon after 1660; d. Aug. 25,
1735. He studied at Trinity College, Dublin; was
consecrated bishop of Cork and Ross 1710. He
opposed the custom of drinking healths in a series
of pamphlets (1713 sqq.) which won him much
notoriety, but has more enduring fame as an antideistical
writer; in reply to John Toland he
published A Letter in Answer to a Book Entitled
Christianity not Mysterious (Dublin, 1697), and afterward
elaborated his argument in The Procedure,
Extent, and Limits of Human Understanding (London;
1728), a critique of Locke's Essay; in Things
Divine and Supernatural Conceived by Analogy with
Things Natural and Human (1733) he asserts that
knowledge of God's essence and attributes can be
only "analogical" and not direct.