The Religious Sentiments of the Human Mind |
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Page 25
... reasons which I cannot here unfold . I do not think my meaning will be misunderstood . I should be sorry to see the disappearance of such phrases as the persistence of force , ' for example , and do not believe that the expression ...
... reasons which I cannot here unfold . I do not think my meaning will be misunderstood . I should be sorry to see the disappearance of such phrases as the persistence of force , ' for example , and do not believe that the expression ...
Page 56
... reason inductively . When we make this appeal to presentative experi- ence we have A given as existing but always with non - A . It seems no contradiction , therefore , to say that both A and non - A exist . But the universal ...
... reason inductively . When we make this appeal to presentative experi- ence we have A given as existing but always with non - A . It seems no contradiction , therefore , to say that both A and non - A exist . But the universal ...
Page 60
... reason . Leaving out the last , for the reasons above - mentioned , we are unable to discover any way in which even the person having the experience can have any certainty as to the truth conveyed . For if the information comes in a ...
... reason . Leaving out the last , for the reasons above - mentioned , we are unable to discover any way in which even the person having the experience can have any certainty as to the truth conveyed . For if the information comes in a ...
Page 63
... reason accordingly . In the first place , we notice with all these beings that the signs of conscious life are periodically absent as in sleep , or irregularly suspended as in swoons . Consciousness is interrupted . We even infer this ...
... reason accordingly . In the first place , we notice with all these beings that the signs of conscious life are periodically absent as in sleep , or irregularly suspended as in swoons . Consciousness is interrupted . We even infer this ...
Page 67
... reason , we do not allow that the matter composing the insect's organism is destroyed . Dust it was , and to dust it simply returns . What , then , is destroyed ? The form , if you please ; the something that made the beetle what it was ...
... reason , we do not allow that the matter composing the insect's organism is destroyed . Dust it was , and to dust it simply returns . What , then , is destroyed ? The form , if you please ; the something that made the beetle what it was ...
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Common terms and phrases
action activity æsthetic 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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