It is a sublime conception of God which is furnished by science, and one wholly consonant with the highest ideals of religion, when it represents Him as revealing Himself through countless ages in the development of the earth as an abode for man and in... Isis - Page 43edited by - 1924Full view - About this book
| Eldred Cornelius Vanderlaan - 1925 - 500 pages
...appeared in Science. ns 57:630-1. June 1, 1923. Also in Review of Reviews. 68:88-9. July. 1923inbreathing of life into its constituent matter, culminating in...his spiritual nature and all his God-like powers. Partial list of signers. Scientists : Charles D. Walcott, geologist, president of the National Academy... | |
| Scudder Klyce - 1925 - 440 pages
...science . . . when it represents him as revealing himself ... in the development of the earth . . . and in the age-long inbreathing of life into its constituent matter, culminating in man". Millikan holds that God jj an "increasing purpose" (Science, Oct. 19, 1923, 297) — is implicitly... | |
| Oswald Eugene Brown - 1926 - 128 pages
...in recent controversies there has been a tendency to present science and religion as irreconcilable and antagonistic domains of thought, for in fact they...with his spiritual nature and all his Godlike powers. In commenting upon this statement Dr. Slosson, the eminent chemist, has very properly said: "The real... | |
| Sherwood Eddy - 1926 - 264 pages
...present science and 1 See "Contributions of Science to Religion," pp. 351-422. religion as irreconcilable and antagonistic domains of thought, for in fact they...man with his spiritual nature and all his God-like powers."1 lSigned by Religious Leaders: Bishop William Lawrence, Bishop William Thomas Manning, Bishop... | |
| Edwin Mims - 1926 - 348 pages
...of Millikan, Osborn, and Conklin, and other scientists, who said in a signed statement of May, 1923: It is a sublime conception of God which is furnished...his spiritual nature and all his God-like powers. They would say that preachers like Percy Grant, Norman Guthrie, and Bishop Brown are not the representatives... | |
| Charles Eucharist de Medicis Sajous - 1926 - 270 pages
...sublime conception of God which is furnished by science, and one wholly consonant with the highest ideal of religion, when it represents Him as revealing Himself...his spiritual nature and all his godlike powers." These examples, to which many could be added, clearly indicate the presence among scientists of many... | |
| 1927 - 374 pages
...conception of God has ever been presented to the mind of man than that which is furnished by science \vhen it represents him as revealing himself through countless...with his spiritual nature and all his godlike powers. But let me go a step further. Science in bringing to light the now generally admitted, though not as... | |
| Angus Stewart Woodburne - 1927 - 396 pages
...Him as revealing Himself through countless ages in the development of the earth as an abode for man, in the age-long inbreathing of life into its constituent...his spiritual nature and all his God-like powers. II A second way of differentiating between religion and science is to describe the former as an evaluatory... | |
| David Starr Jordan, John Arthur Thomson, Herbert Spencer Jennings, George Howard Parker, Ernest William MacBride, Edwin Grant Conklin, William Berryman Scott, Francis Arthur Bather, John Walter Gregory, Arthur Smith Woodward, Charles Stuart Gager, Edward Wilber Berry, Sir Edward Bagnall Poulton, Sir Arthur Everett Shipley, William Morton Wheeler, Frederic Brewster Loomis, David Meredith Seares Watson, Richard Swann Lull, William King Gregory, Grafton Elliot Smith, Samuel Jackson Holmes, Julian Huxley - 1928 - 464 pages
...University of Chicago Press, 1926. SCOTT, WB The Theory of Organic Evolution. The Macmillan Co., 1917. "The purpose of science is to develop, without prejudice...his spiritual nature and all his Godlike powers." — Dr. Robert A. Millikan, in Science. INDEX PAGE Abreu, Madame, observations of behaviour of apes... | |
| George Preston Mains - 1928 - 280 pages
...representative Americans from leading departments of science, closes with the following paragraph: "It is a sublime conception of God which is furnished...his spiritual nature and all his God-like powers." Evolution, seen intelligently and without prejudice, so far from [52] displacing or disparaging God,... | |
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