| Richard Gause Boone - 1904 - 452 pages
...the great mirror in which our reason sees itself reflected." And the late Herbert Spencer says : " The power manifested throughout the universe distinguished...ourselves, wells up under the form of consciousness." But as the previous author quoted says:* "The fixed relations in which all objects of our thought stand... | |
| Richard Gause Boone - 1904 - 432 pages
...the great mirror in which our reason sees itself reflected." And the late Herbert Spencer says : " The power manifested throughout the universe distinguished...ourselves, wells up under the form of consciousness." But as the previous author quoted says:* " The fixed relations in which all objects of our thought... | |
| 1906 - 660 pages
...unceasingly and everywhere, which is outside us and still within us according to its different modes. ' Consequently, the final outcome of that speculation...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness.' z Experience, however, teaches us that the relations between these mental symbols correspond with the... | |
| Mary Emily Dowson - 1906 - 190 pages
...him for better philosophers. Idealist malgrt lui, he sent me to the idealists. When he had taught me that " the Power manifested throughout the universe...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness," where else could I reasonably go along the philosophic road ? I, like my teacher, felt what he spoke... | |
| Hector Macpherson - 1907 - 354 pages
...his ' Principles of Sociology,' we find Spencer, in dealing with primitive religion, saying that " the final outcome of that speculation commenced by...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness." In other words, the energy which we are conscious of as mind is a specialised form of the Infinite... | |
| Samuel Cox, Sir William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt - 1907 - 612 pages
...generating the other, they must be different modes of the same. Consequently the final outcome of the speculation commenced by the primitive man is that...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness. (Principles of Sociology, p. 839.) " One truth must ever grow clearer — the truth that there is an... | |
| Frederick William Bussell - 1907 - 394 pages
...in the totality of the Divine Idea"? (20) Do we accept without reserve Mr. Spencer's statement : " The Power manifested throughout the Universe distinguished...ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness " ? (Principles of Sociology, iii. 171). " The / physical government of the world," says JS Mill /... | |
| Sheldon Leavitt - 1907 - 262 pages
...all ONE. " The power that manifests throughout the universe distinguished as material," says Spencer, "is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness. " Emerson says: DISEASE ORIGIN IN MIND. 27 " It is a secret which every intellectual man quickly learns,... | |
| Sheldon Leavitt - 1908 - 252 pages
...all ONE. "The power that manifests throughout the universe distinguished as material," says Spencer, "is the same power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness." Emerson says: DISEASE ORIGIN IN MIND. 27 " It is a secret which every intellectual man quickly learns,... | |
| Emile Boutroux - 1909 - 424 pages
...Moreover, speaking of the Eternal Energy from which all things proceed, Herbert Spencer declares, "It is the same Power which in ourselves wells up under the form of consciousness." 1 The ego, then, if it is not the Absolute-in-Itself, is the Absolute for us, ie the most immediate... | |
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