The Nineteenth Century, Volume 23Henry S. King & Company, 1888 |
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Page 572
of thought without sensation . Indeed , I may go a step further— I do not believe that any one who has ever watched children or noticed a picture or a tune can possibly doubt that we learn to see and to hear as we learn to speak and to ...
of thought without sensation . Indeed , I may go a step further— I do not believe that any one who has ever watched children or noticed a picture or a tune can possibly doubt that we learn to see and to hear as we learn to speak and to ...
Page 575
... thoughts ? A thought which cannot be expressed or recalled to the mind , or be in any way fixed in a definite shape , is not a thought at all , but only a state of feeling ; and though it is impossible to imagine a state of feeling ...
... thoughts ? A thought which cannot be expressed or recalled to the mind , or be in any way fixed in a definite shape , is not a thought at all , but only a state of feeling ; and though it is impossible to imagine a state of feeling ...
Page 753
... thought of an immense abysmal Nothing is awful , only less so than that of All and God . ' We also find that ' it has been dragged into the domain of religious thought , and under the name of Nirvana has become the highest goal of ...
... thought of an immense abysmal Nothing is awful , only less so than that of All and God . ' We also find that ' it has been dragged into the domain of religious thought , and under the name of Nirvana has become the highest goal of ...
Contents
THE PROGRESS OF CREMATION By Sir Henry Thompson | 1 |
a Dialogue By Frederic Harrison | 18 |
A RIVER OF RUINED CAPITALS By Sir W W Hunter | 40 |
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