Living Philosophies |
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Page 22
... experience as the ultimate authority in knowledge and conduct means in the present state of civilization , what its reactions are upon what is thought and done . For such a faith is not at present either articulate or widely held . If ...
... experience as the ultimate authority in knowledge and conduct means in the present state of civilization , what its reactions are upon what is thought and done . For such a faith is not at present either articulate or widely held . If ...
Page 23
... experience to furnish organizing principles and directive ends . Religions have been saturated with the supernatural - and the super- natural signifies precisely that which lies beyond experience . Moral codes have been allied to this ...
... experience to furnish organizing principles and directive ends . Religions have been saturated with the supernatural - and the super- natural signifies precisely that which lies beyond experience . Moral codes have been allied to this ...
Page 31
... experience takes on concrete meaning . Our international system ( since , with all its disorder , it is a system ) presents another example , writ large , of the restric- tion of experience created by exclusiveness and isolation . In ...
... experience takes on concrete meaning . Our international system ( since , with all its disorder , it is a system ) presents another example , writ large , of the restric- tion of experience created by exclusiveness and isolation . In ...
Contents
012114125 PAGE I ALBERT EINSTEIN | 3 |
BERTRAND RUSSELL | 9 |
JOHN DEWEY | 21 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieved æsthetic animal atoms beauty become believe better biological body brain called century Christian church civilization conception conduct Confucius coöperation creatures creed death democracy doctrine dualism earth economic emotion ethical evil existence experience fact faith fear feel future H. L. MENCKEN happiness hope human nature ideals ideas immortal individual instinct intellectual intelligence invisible world IRVING BABBITT IRWIN EDMAN J. B. S. HALDANE JAMES TRUSLOW ADAMS John Dewey JOSEPH WOOD KRUTCH JULIA PETERKIN knowledge least less living man's mankind matter means ment merely mind modern nation never one's organization ourselves past philosophy physical political possible practical present question race reason religion religious ROBERT ANDREWS MILLIKAN Rousseau Rousseauist scientific seems sense social society soul spirit things thought tion to-day true truth universe values whole WILLIAM RALPH INGE words