The Religious Sentiments of the Human Mind |
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... WORSHIP AND PRAYER . PART IV . THE SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION OF RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS . XXXVI . TRUE BELIEFS AND FALSE BELIEFS XXXVII . THE RELIGIONS OF IGNORANCE AND ERROR XXXVIII . THE RELIGIONS OF SCIENCE THE RELIGION OF SOCIAL IMMORTALITY ...
... WORSHIP AND PRAYER . PART IV . THE SCIENTIFIC EDUCATION OF RELIGIOUS SENTIMENTS . XXXVI . TRUE BELIEFS AND FALSE BELIEFS XXXVII . THE RELIGIONS OF IGNORANCE AND ERROR XXXVIII . THE RELIGIONS OF SCIENCE THE RELIGION OF SOCIAL IMMORTALITY ...
Page 44
... worship and supplication . It is left for men only to ascertain and depend upon nature's uniformities . Natural causes occupy thought , and the supernatural is removed backward . The effect of this is to give freer scope for 44 PART II ...
... worship and supplication . It is left for men only to ascertain and depend upon nature's uniformities . Natural causes occupy thought , and the supernatural is removed backward . The effect of this is to give freer scope for 44 PART II ...
Page 50
... worship as furnishing the archaic form of religion . Whatever conclusion may eventually be reached upon this point , it is certain that the statement made in previous chapters , to the effect that the constitution of men's minds is such ...
... worship as furnishing the archaic form of religion . Whatever conclusion may eventually be reached upon this point , it is certain that the statement made in previous chapters , to the effect that the constitution of men's minds is such ...
Page 73
... worship , and illustrated in the Greek religion in the manner already referred to.1 We may , therefore , dismiss the old polytheistic hypothesis , of which the Greeks and Romans have furnished the common type , as having no probability ...
... worship , and illustrated in the Greek religion in the manner already referred to.1 We may , therefore , dismiss the old polytheistic hypothesis , of which the Greeks and Romans have furnished the common type , as having no probability ...
Page 85
... worship religious rites are observed because the devotee is afraid of the harm which the departed spirit may do him or some of his interests . The savage expects direct interference of supernatural beings with his course of life . If ...
... worship religious rites are observed because the devotee is afraid of the harm which the departed spirit may do him or some of his interests . The savage expects direct interference of supernatural beings with his course of life . If ...
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Common terms and phrases
action activity æsthetic altruistic arise authority become belief cause chap CHAPTER character christian church cognition conduct consciousness constitution constructions Crown 8vo death declare degree deity desire divine doctrine E. A. FREEMAN emotional energy 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 limitation MANDELL CREIGHTON matter ment mental monotheism monotheistic moral nature non-ego notion object organisation pain PANTHEISM perfection phenomena pleasure polytheism positive possible postulate presentative experience Psychology question R. A. PROCTOR realisation reality regard relations religious sentiments representation representative S. R. GARDINER SAMUEL RAWSON GARDINER science of religion scientific self-distinguishing sensational experience social organism space spirit supernatural society supernatural world System of Psychology teaching testimony things thought tion true truth universal volitional vols Woodcuts worship
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