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" And now what may we infer will be the evolution of religious ideas and sentiments throughout the future ? On the one hand, it is irrational to suppose that the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease.... "
Scientific theology - Page 94
by Thomas Walter Barber - 1884 - 190 pages
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The Principles of Sociology, Volume 8, Issue 1897

Herbert Spencer - 1897 - 666 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cense. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...^Manifestly it, must undergo further changes; and however much changed it must continue to exist. What, then, are the transformations to be expected? If we reduce...
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The Popular Science Monthly, Volume 24

1884 - 902 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and, however much changed, it must continue to exist. What, then, are the transformations to be expected ? If we...
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The Insuppressible Book: A Controversy Between Herbert Spencer and Frederic ...

Gail Hamilton, Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 300 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and however much changed it must continue to exist. What then are the transformations to be expected? If we reduce...
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Ecclesiastical Institutions: Being Part VI of the Principles of Sociology

Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 228 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and however much changed it must continue to exist. What, then, are the transformations to be expected ? If we...
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The Nature and Reality of Religion: A Controversy Between Frederic Harrison ...

Frederic Harrison - 1885 - 254 pages
...the changes which have brought the religions consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...have seen, will disappear and leave an unfilled gap." The author of the " Principles of Sociology" here recalls the grand principle, or rather the supreme...
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Choice Literature: A Monthly Magazine, Volume 3

1885 - 762 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...generated as we have seen, will disappear and leave an l unfilled gap. Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and, however much changed, ! it must continue...
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The Unitarian, Volume 9

Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott - 1894 - 608 pages
...of distinct thought, though it forever remains a consciousness." "On the other hand," says Spencer, "it is irrational to suppose that the religious consciousness, naturally generated as it has been, will disappear and leave an unfilled gap." False as the savage's ghost-theory was, "the...
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The Principles of Sociology, Volume 2, Part 2

Herbert Spencer - 1896 - 460 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...we have seen, will disappear and leave an unfilled gup. Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and however much changed it must continue to exist....
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The Principles of Sociology: pt. VI. Ecclesiastical institutions. pt. VII ...

Herbert Spencer - 1897 - 670 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...religious consciousness, naturally generated as we hnvc soeri, will disappear and leave an unfilled gap. Manifestly it must undergo further changes; and...
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Eclectic Magazine, and Monthly Edition of the Living Age, Volume 39; Volume 102

John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1884 - 892 pages
...the changes which have brought the religious consciousness to its present form will suddenly cease. On the other hand, it is irrational to suppose that...Manifestly it must undergo further changes ; and however much changed it must continue to exist. What then are the transformations to be expected ? If we reduce...
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