The Great Harmonia: Concerning Physiological Vices and Virtues and the Seven Phases of Marriage: the Reformer1864 the present volume is composed of discourses written during the past year. They treat upon a class of subjects, which, above all others, are most intimately connected with the organization, development, and destiny of individual and social man. by. |
Contents
LECTURE | 9 |
LECTURE II | 26 |
LECTURE III | 58 |
LECTURE IV | 73 |
LECTURE V | 96 |
LECTURE | 133 |
LECTURE VIII | 190 |
LECTURE IX | 225 |
LECTURE XI | 277 |
LECTURE XII | 287 |
Types The Magnets Types of Mankind | 308 |
dences of True Union not External The Offspring of Love and Wisdom 339 | 362 |
Other editions - View all
The Great Harmonia the Reformer: Concerning Physiological Vices and Virtues ... Andrew Jackson Davis No preview available - 2014 |
The Great Harmonia the Reformer: Concerning Physiological Vices and Virtues ... Andrew Jackson Davis No preview available - 2014 |
Common terms and phrases
affirm animals attractions beauty behold black tea blood blood-love Boccacio body born brain cause celestial marriage character child church civil clairvoyance coffee conjugal element conjugal love conjugal principle constitution divine divorce doctors of divinity doctrine dyspepsia earth effect element essence eternal evanescent evil existence experience extreme action Extremists eyes fact faculties feel female give habits happiness harmony heart heaven ignorance impression individual intellectual inversionism Inversionists jugal knowledge Law of Attraction less live look man's manhood manifestations mankind marriage relation married ment mental mind monogamic moral nature Nature's never Ninon de l'Enclos nutritive offspring organization parents Patchouly pearlash person philosophers physical physiological polygamy purity reason Reform riage sexes social society soul sphere spiritual spiritual marriage temperaments thee things thou thought tion true marriage truth union universal vices wife woman women wrong young youth