Those who think that science is dissipating religious beliefs and sentiments seem unaware that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new. Psychology Made Practical - 129 psl.autoriai: Henry C. Sheppard - 1919 - 309 psl.Visos knygos peržiūra - Apie šią knygą
| 1884 - 902 psl.
...of a consciousness which at the outset contained a germ of truth obscured by multitudinous errors. Those who think that science is dissipating religious...for an explanation which has a seeming feasibility, it substitutes an explanation which, carrying us back only a certain distance, there leaves us in presence... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1884 - 892 psl.
...of a consciousness which at the outset contained a germ of truth obscured by multitudinous errors. Those who think that science is dissipating religious...interpretation is added to the new. Or rather, we may say that transferrence from the one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since, for an explanation which... | |
| 1884 - 1142 psl.
...I pointed out to ' those who think that science is dissipating religious beliefs and sentiments' ' that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new:' increase rather than diminution being the result. I .said that in perpetually extending our knowledge... | |
| 1885 - 762 psl.
...of a consciousness which at the outset contained a germ of truth obscured by multitudinous errors. Those who think that science is dissipating religious...for an explanation which has a seeming feasibility, it substitutes an explanation which, carrying us back only a certain distance, there leaves us in presence... | |
| Jacob Youde William Lloyd - 1885 - 536 psl.
...distinguished as material is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness " But those who think that science is dissipating religious...new. Or rather, we may say that transference from one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since, for an explanation which has a seeming feasibility,... | |
| 1885 - 900 psl.
...Prospect," I pointed out to " those who think that science is dissipating religious beliefs and sentiments," "that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new ; " increase rather than diminution being the result. I said that in perpetually extending our knowledge... | |
| Gail Hamilton, Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 296 psl.
...I pointed out to ' those who think that Science is dissipating religious beliefs and sentiments ' ' that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new : ' increase rather than diminution being the result. I said that in perpetually extending our knowledge... | |
| Frederic Harrison - 1885 - 254 psl.
...I pointed out to " those who think that science is dissipating religious beliefs and sentiments " " that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new:" increase rather than diminution being the result. I said that in perpetually extending our knowledge... | |
| James Stark - 1890 - 200 psl.
...to. The progress of science has not removed mystery, it has only pushed it a little further back. " Those who think that science is dissipating religious...taken from the old interpretation is added to the new. . . . Science substitutes an explanation which, carrying us back only a certain distance, there leaves... | |
| Francis Asbury Shoup - 1891 - 376 psl.
...Spencer is equally definite in his statements. He says in the Nineteenth Century of January, 1884: "Those who think that science is dissipating religious...new. Or rather, we may say, that transference from one to the other is accompanied by increase, since for an explanation which has a seeming feasibility,... | |
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