The Sewanee Review, Volume 7University of the South, 1899 - American fiction |
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Page 8
... regard it as antecedently probable that there existed a prehistoric stage in human evolution , when no con- ceptions were held that we ought strictly to designate as re- ligious . In common with the higher animals , however , primi ...
... regard it as antecedently probable that there existed a prehistoric stage in human evolution , when no con- ceptions were held that we ought strictly to designate as re- ligious . In common with the higher animals , however , primi ...
Page 9
... regard them with apprehension . It is the element of mystery behind the phenomenon , the apparently self - moving activity , akin to that inner sense of freedom or volition which he experiences in his own con- sciousness that leads the ...
... regard them with apprehension . It is the element of mystery behind the phenomenon , the apparently self - moving activity , akin to that inner sense of freedom or volition which he experiences in his own con- sciousness that leads the ...
Page 11
... tious . If we were to stop short with illustrations of this kind , the study of primitive religious ideas might seem to demonstrate what the scientific mind would regard as a sympathy and Comparative Study of Religions . II.
... tious . If we were to stop short with illustrations of this kind , the study of primitive religious ideas might seem to demonstrate what the scientific mind would regard as a sympathy and Comparative Study of Religions . II.
Page 12
what the scientific mind would regard as a sympathy and persistence of superstitions rather than the unity of the reli- gious sentiment . Probing beneath these surface manifesta- tions , the scientific student of religions finds that ...
what the scientific mind would regard as a sympathy and persistence of superstitions rather than the unity of the reli- gious sentiment . Probing beneath these surface manifesta- tions , the scientific student of religions finds that ...
Page
... regard as alien , and treat them ten- derly , like the outgrown garments of childhood . We shall see in these very notions , once universal , the pathetic grop- ings of the undeveloped mind of man toward a knowledge of the Power and ...
... regard as alien , and treat them ten- derly , like the outgrown garments of childhood . We shall see in these very notions , once universal , the pathetic grop- ings of the undeveloped mind of man toward a knowledge of the Power and ...
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