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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied... The Popular Science Monthly - Page 3171885Full view - About this book
 | Herbert Spencer - 1897 - 666 pages
...§ 660. 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase; since,... | |
 | John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1884 - 894 pages
...errors. 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. Or rather, we may say that transferrence from the one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since,... | |
 | 1884 - 1108 pages
...multitudinous errors. Those who think that science is dissipating religious beliefsand sentiments, seem unaware that whatever of mystery is taken from the old interpretation is added to the new. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase; since,... | |
 | Frederic Harrison - 1885 - 256 pages
...errors. 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase; since,... | |
 | 1885 - 762 pages
...multitudinous errors. 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. Or, rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase; since,... | |
 | Gail Hamilton, Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 300 pages
...errors. 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since,... | |
 | Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 228 pages
...§ 660. 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since,... | |
 | Jacob Youde William Lloyd - 1885 - 536 pages
...consciousness " But 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from one to the other is accompanied by increase ; since, for... | |
 | Frederick Howard Collins - 1889 - 612 pages
...consciousness. 660. 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. Or rather, we may say that transference from the one to the other is accompanied by increase; since,... | |
 | James Stark - 1890 - 200 pages
...further back. " 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. . . . Science substitutes an explanation which, carrying us back only a certain distance, there leaves... | |
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