His works on natural and experimental philosophy, particularly on hydrostatics and pneumatics, and his own improvements of the air pump, have placed his name in a rank second only to that of Newton: as a chemist, he takes the lead of all his contemporaries; and in his theological writings, he has so blended philosophy with religion as to exhibit to the world the true value of scientific pursuits.
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James Henry Monk, The Life of Richard Bentley, D.D.: Master of Trinity College (1833) [http://books.google.com/books?id=0UoJAAAAQAAJ Vol.1]