The Religious Sentiments of the Human Mind |
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Page 7
... pleasure and pain , to conduct generally , as determining both individual and social happiness . With regard to knowledge , though the science be as a whole concrete , abstract relations will be presented for considera- tion . And , on ...
... pleasure and pain , to conduct generally , as determining both individual and social happiness . With regard to knowledge , though the science be as a whole concrete , abstract relations will be presented for considera- tion . And , on ...
Page 14
... Pleasure and pain , activity and passivity , and even trains of thought seem thus to be dependent upon the corporeal organism . Many a time the self would , if only it could , avoid or overcome the forces which it distinguishes as not ...
... Pleasure and pain , activity and passivity , and even trains of thought seem thus to be dependent upon the corporeal organism . Many a time the self would , if only it could , avoid or overcome the forces which it distinguishes as not ...
Page 40
... pleasure and pain . Of this pair , the former we seek to conserve and perpetuate ; the latter to eliminate and avoid , and , as a result , we hold up before the mind pleasurable experiences as ends of attainment . Thus , when we form ...
... pleasure and pain . Of this pair , the former we seek to conserve and perpetuate ; the latter to eliminate and avoid , and , as a result , we hold up before the mind pleasurable experiences as ends of attainment . Thus , when we form ...
Page 46
... pleasure and pain , and though in its constructions of possible pleasure it improves upon past experience , it never- theless deals solely with objects which experience has taught it to appreciate as pleasurable . Obviously , then , one ...
... pleasure and pain , and though in its constructions of possible pleasure it improves upon past experience , it never- theless deals solely with objects which experience has taught it to appreciate as pleasurable . Obviously , then , one ...
Page 71
... pleasure in the good of the whole . In the degree that every one does that , the society becomes more perfect ; in the degree that they fail to accomplish this , the social organism is defective . Thus , if there be a social ...
... pleasure in the good of the whole . In the degree that every one does that , the society becomes more perfect ; in the degree that they fail to accomplish this , the social organism is defective . Thus , if there be a social ...
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Common terms and phrases
action activity ęsthetic altruistic arise authority become belief cause chap CHAPTER character christian church cloth extra cognition conduct consciousness constitution constructions Crown 8vo death declarations degree deity desire divine doctrine E. A. FREEMAN effect emotional environment Essays evil existence external fact favour feeling force furnishing future gilt edges happiness Hence HISTORY human mind idea ideals Illustrations implies individual inevitably influence intelligence judgment knowledge latter limitation MANDELL CREIGHTON ment mental monotheism monotheistic moral natural non-ego notion object organisation pain PANTHEISM perfection phenomena pleasure polytheism positive possible postulate question R. A. PROCTOR realisation reality regard relations religious sentiments representation representative resisting bodies S. R. GARDINER SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER science of religion scientific self-distinguishing sensational experience social organism space spirit super supernatural society supernatural world teaching things THOMAS CARLYLE thought tion true truth universal volitional vols whole Woodcuts worship
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