Religion for InfidelsHolborn Publishing Company, 1961 - Всего страниц: 294 |
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Стр. 170
... essential features , and for the endless confusions , anomalies and inconsistencies that have inevitably resulted from it . For to postulate a God who is essentially all goodness , when this goodness is understood as the ideal of ...
... essential features , and for the endless confusions , anomalies and inconsistencies that have inevitably resulted from it . For to postulate a God who is essentially all goodness , when this goodness is understood as the ideal of ...
Стр. 207
... essential component of all living matter , which , as we have seen , is intelligence . The mental force animating the cellular units of the organisms described , is never even given a thought . Yet , it must be assumed , otherwise the ...
... essential component of all living matter , which , as we have seen , is intelligence . The mental force animating the cellular units of the organisms described , is never even given a thought . Yet , it must be assumed , otherwise the ...
Стр. 212
... essential symptom ' . That is true enough ; but it is not enough , because , added to the increased suggestibility is the subject's singular capacity to get into touch with the formative and usually inaccessible forces inherent in ...
... essential symptom ' . That is true enough ; but it is not enough , because , added to the increased suggestibility is the subject's singular capacity to get into touch with the formative and usually inaccessible forces inherent in ...
Содержание
Chapter Page | 7 |
PART I | 13 |
THE MEANING OF RELIGION | 27 |
Авторские права | |
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A. N. Whitehead able ancient animals Aristotle Arthur Thomson assume attitude attributes behaviour believe Bertrand Russell biological bodily body C. E. M. Joad cause cells century Chap chapter Christian Christian morals Church civilized claim concerning conclusion Coué Coué's creatures Darwin Dean Inge defect deity desirable divine doctrine doubt dualism effect England envy especially essential evidence evil evolution evolutionary F. H. Bradley fact factor favour feel governing life's processes human hypnotism ill-favoured imagination influence instance instinct intelligence J. B. S. Haldane John Cowper Powys kind Lamarck least less living matter man's mankind means merely mind modern morbidity mystery Nature Nietzsche observed organism person plants possible postulate power behind phenomena pray prayer probably problem psychology question Rationalists reason regard religion religious says seems Socrates soul Spencer suffering suggest superior survival telepathy theory things thinker thought tion Universe variation volition whilst wholly