Christian Examiner and Theological Review, Volume 76O. Everett, 1864 - Theology |
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Page 24
... complete , any more than that his moral judgments were faultless . Nor was his theory quite consist- ent with itself . Especially where he stood most widely apart from the general sense of Christendom , and most gloried in the ...
... complete , any more than that his moral judgments were faultless . Nor was his theory quite consist- ent with itself . Especially where he stood most widely apart from the general sense of Christendom , and most gloried in the ...
Page 49
... complete . The last few years of the old man's life were gilded by a fame whose con- solation his manhood had sighed for in vain . " He became known , " says his biographer , " never to be forgotten again . All at once , in all the ...
... complete . The last few years of the old man's life were gilded by a fame whose con- solation his manhood had sighed for in vain . " He became known , " says his biographer , " never to be forgotten again . All at once , in all the ...
Page 51
... complete in its kind . Forty years ago , this man undertook to lecture on philosophy in Berlin , an office for which , in point of ability , he was better fitted than any individual then in the field . Having , after brilliant probation ...
... complete in its kind . Forty years ago , this man undertook to lecture on philosophy in Berlin , an office for which , in point of ability , he was better fitted than any individual then in the field . Having , after brilliant probation ...
Page 57
... complete classification . The first class comprises all the ideas which make the whole of a given experience . Here the adequate reason appears as the law of causality . The second consists of ideas of reflec- tion , in German ...
... complete classification . The first class comprises all the ideas which make the whole of a given experience . Here the adequate reason appears as the law of causality . The second consists of ideas of reflec- tion , in German ...
Page 60
... complete optical theory , which behooved to be neither physical nor chemical , but physi- ological . " The independence shown in this decision is credit- able , and a striking illustration of the magis amica veritas . For Goethe was one ...
... complete optical theory , which behooved to be neither physical nor chemical , but physi- ological . " The independence shown in this decision is credit- able , and a striking illustration of the magis amica veritas . For Goethe was one ...
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American appeared beauty become beginning believe better Boston called character Charles Christian Church clear complete condition Constitution course criticism doubt effect England English existence experience fact faith feeling field followed force four French friends German give given Gospels hand heart hope Hugo human ideas illustration important interest Italy John knowledge labor land learning less liberty lived means mind moral nature never once opinion passed perhaps period political position possible practical present principles question reason received regard religious respect seems society soul spirit success task things thought thousand tion true truth universal volume whole writings York