| Charles Marsh Mead - 1889 - 496 pages
...compelled to symbolize objective force in terms of subjective force from lack of any other symbol." And so, "the final outcome of that speculation commenced by...Power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness."1 It is difficult not to think that Mr. Spencer feels the force of the objection more... | |
| William Boyd Carpenter - 1889 - 494 pages
...gives the essence and the will to the form." — Jakob Mhm, "De Signatura Rerum" ch. i., § 13-15. "The final outcome of that speculation commenced by...power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness."—H. Spencer, Article in "Nineteenth Century," No. 83, p. 9. NOTE 38, p. 261. " Perhaps... | |
| 1901 - 736 pages
..."the universal Power manifested throughout the Universe," in whose presence we daily find ourselves, "is the same Power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness." Again we may notice that science, by teaching that the Universe is still evolving and is under the... | |
| Howard MacQueary - 1891 - 308 pages
...of the soul is its derivation from a power or energy which is itself eternal. Mr. Spencer tells us that " the Power manifested throughout the universe...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness, "f He means that the energy which operates nature is two sided ; in one form it appears as matter,... | |
| Washington Gladden - 1891 - 266 pages
...to the boundaries of a positive theism. " The Power manifested throughout the universe," he says, " distinguished as material, is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the forms of consciousness ; " and again : " This Inscrutable Existence . . . stands toward our general... | |
| 1891 - 448 pages
...higher.1 If we add to this the statement that " the Power which manifests itself throughout the Universe is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness," or, " the power which manifests itself in consciousness is but a differently conditioned form of the... | |
| 1892 - 328 pages
...of the principle laid down by Herbert Spencer, as a bond of union between religion and science, — that "the power manifested throughout the universe...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness," both modes of force being regarded as phenomenal manifestations of one absolute Eeality by which they... | |
| comte Eugène Goblet d'Alviella - 1892 - 324 pages
...between religion and science, — that " the power manifested throughout the universe distin\ guished as material, is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness," both modes of force being regarded as phenomenal manifestations of one absolute Eeality by which they... | |
| James Orr - 1893 - 584 pages
...conception.3 Numerous other statements might be quoted all more or less implying knowledge, — as, eg, that "the Power manifested throughout the Universe...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness " ; while the " necessity we are under to think of the external energy in terms of the internal energy... | |
| Edward Caird - 1893 - 424 pages
...that speculation commenced by the primitive man, is that the Power manifested throughout the world distinguished as material, is the same Power which...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness." In the next section, Mr. Spencer. goes on to say that "those who think that science is dissipating... | |
| |