| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 314 psl.
...instinct and intelligence is what the whole of this analysis was meant to bring out. We formulate it thus: There are things that intelligence alone is able to...instinct alone could find; but it will never seek them.14 Instinct is sympathy. If this sympathy could extend its object and also reflect upon itself,... | |
| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 312 psl.
...and intelligence is what the whole of this analysis was meant to bring out. We formulate it thus : There are things that intelligence alone is able to...instinct alone could find; but it will never seek them.1* Instinct is sympathy. If this sympathy could extend its object and also reflect upon itself,... | |
| Elsa Barker, David Patterson Hatch (Spirit) - 1919 - 258 psl.
...the mental and the instinctive. Bergson says, in his "Creative Evolution," "There are things vhich intelligence alone is able to seek, but which, by...alone could find; but it will never seek them." It was inevitable that modern psychology, with its constructive curiosity, should turn its attention to the... | |
| John Godfrey Hill - 1919 - 248 psl.
...and given reason a view of faith by using the lens of intuition. "There are things," says Bergson, "that intelligence alone is able to seek, but which,...instinct alone could find, but it will never seek them."1 Modern theology, on the other hand, is piercing the fog and giving intuition a better use of... | |
| Elsa Barker, David Patterson Hatch - 1919 - 248 psl.
...instinctive. Bergson says, in his "Creative Evolution," "There are things which intelligence alone is ahle to seek, but which, by itself, it will never find....alone could find; but it will never seek them." It was inevitable that modern psychology, with its constructive curiosity, should turn its attention to the... | |
| John Charlton Hardwick - 1920 - 172 psl.
...theory of instinct and intellect). As he puts it : " There are things that Intelligence (or intellect) alone is able to seek, but which, by itself, it will...instinct alone could find ; but it will never seek them." (Creative Evolution, p. 159). " If the consciousness which slumbers in instinct were to wake up ...... | |
| Horatio Willis Dresser - 1928 - 488 psl.
...great resource, but we have diverged too far in our intellectual life to recover such an instinct. "There are things that intelligence alone is able...instinct alone could find ; but it will never seek them." " Conception of Evolution. — What is the resource? We must rid ourselves of the practicality which... | |
| 1913 - 536 psl.
...fulfilling it. "There are things which intelligence alone is able to seek, but which by itself alone it will never find. These things instinct alone could find ; but it will never seek them." This is a rather oracular deliverance. But if one is permitted to guess at the interpretation of the... | |
| 1914 - 182 psl.
...than intelligence is, but it is not its way to give an account of itself. Thus we are in a dilemma : " There are things that intelligence alone is able to...instinct alone could find ; but it will never seek them." ..." If instinct could be wound up into knowledge instead of being wound down into action, it would... | |
| 1913 - 890 psl.
...which it does not wish to have an idea. Thus it seeks to employ itself outside practical action. " There are things that intelligence alone is able to...instinct alone could find; but it will never seek them."f Intellect tries, indeed, to embrace life and thought, but it fails in its endeavor, because... | |
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