1. Baker, Henry. 1743. An Attempt Towards a Natural History of the Polyp in a Letter to Martin Folkes, esq. London: Dodsley.
2. Baxter, Richard. 1667. The Reasons of the Christian Religion. The First Part, of Godliness: proving by natural evidence the being of God, the necessity of holiness and a future life of retribution; the sinfulness of the world, the desert of Hell; and what hope of recovery mercies intimate. The Second Part, of Christianity: proving by evidence supernatural and natural, the certain truth of the christian belief: and answering the objections of unbelievers. First meditated for the well-settling of his own belief, and now published for the benefit of others, by Richard Baxter. It openeth also the true resolution of the Christian Faith. Also an Appendix, defending the Soul’s Immortality against the somatists or Epicureans and other Pseudo philosophers. London: R. White.
3. Belaval, Y. 1967. Sur le matérialisme de Diderot. In Europäische Aufklärung, ed. H. Friedrich and F. Schalk, 9–21. Fink: Munich.
4. Benitez, Miguel. 1998. Y a-t-il une philosophie clandestine? Le statuts des copies manuscrites de De rerum natura. La Lettre clandestine 7: 355–368.
5. Bentley, Richard. 1971. Matter and Motion cannot think, or a Confutation of Atheism from the Faculties of the Soul (Sermon II, April 4th 1692). In Works, ed. A. Dyce. (London 1838), III 27–72. Hildesheim: Olms.