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| | Prejudice. They hated me without a cause. By Rev. Samuel Cochran. 1844 PREJUDICE. |
 | | These attractions and aversions are frequently called prejudices; as, for example, the prejudices of education, the prejudices of party, national prejudiced, denominational prejudices, prejudices in one's favor, or against him, andc. |
 | | Prejudice, then, being the contrary is the committing of the will to or against any given subject, at the bidding of mere constitutional impulse, or selfish consideration, regardless of the true weight of evidence. |
 | | So the exercise of prejudice leads men to attribute evil to its objects; this reacts upon their prejudice to inflame it, and it again produces corresponding efforts to establish the conviction of justifying evil abroad, and thus a malevolence is rapidly ripened, which nothing short of the extermination of its objects can satiate. |
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