The Psychology of Religious Experience |
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Side viii
... Persons " was published in the Ameri- can Journal of Theology . Other material from this book was used in an article published in the Monist under the title " The Psychological Basis of Religion . " I wish particularly to acknowledge my ...
... Persons " was published in the Ameri- can Journal of Theology . Other material from this book was used in an article published in the Monist under the title " The Psychological Basis of Religion . " I wish particularly to acknowledge my ...
Side xii
... PERSONS • • • 355 • 377 XX . THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGIOUS SECTS XXI . THE RELIGIOUS CONSCIOUSNESS IN RELATION TO DEMO- CRACY AND SCIENCE · . 396 INDEX · • 421 PART I HISTORY AND METHOD OF THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGION. CONTENTS.
... PERSONS • • • 355 • 377 XX . THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGIOUS SECTS XXI . THE RELIGIOUS CONSCIOUSNESS IN RELATION TO DEMO- CRACY AND SCIENCE · . 396 INDEX · • 421 PART I HISTORY AND METHOD OF THE PSYCHOLOGY OF RELIGION. CONTENTS.
Side 22
... person may have no art conscious- ness . It depends upon the run of attention . The same is true of the moral and religious consciousness . Each involves specific content and experience . Nei- ther is inevitable . Persons exist without ...
... person may have no art conscious- ness . It depends upon the run of attention . The same is true of the moral and religious consciousness . Each involves specific content and experience . Nei- ther is inevitable . Persons exist without ...
Side 51
... the normal consequence of which is death or ex- clusion from the tribe . " In Tonga , for example , it was believed that if any one fed himself with his own hands after touching the sacred person of a superior chief 51 CUSTOM AND TABOO.
... the normal consequence of which is death or ex- clusion from the tribe . " In Tonga , for example , it was believed that if any one fed himself with his own hands after touching the sacred person of a superior chief 51 CUSTOM AND TABOO.
Side 52
... persons could not touch food with their hands and had to be fed by others . The name of a person may not be spoken aloud , for if this is done , the person named is liable to severe sickness and death . Strangers are likely to convey ...
... persons could not touch food with their hands and had to be fed by others . The name of a person may not be spoken aloud , for if this is done , the person named is liable to severe sickness and death . Strangers are likely to convey ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
action activity adolescence animal appear attained attention attitude become ceremonials character child Christian church classes conception conversion coöperation customs divine doctrines E. A. Ross elaborate emotional ence Ernest Crawley ethical expression fact factors faith feeling forms functional psychology habits human ideals ideas ideational impulses individual influence instinct intellectual interests involved Irving King J. G. Frazer Kafir magic means ment mental methods mind modern moral movement myths nation nature ness one's organization persons phenomena possess practical prayer Professor prophets Psychology of Religion R. R. Marett race reactions reference regarded relation religious consciousness religious experience revival ritual sacrifice savage scientific sciousness sense sexual social consciousness society Spencer and Gillen spirit stage Stanley Hall Starbuck symbols taboo tendency things tion tive totem various vital W. H. R. Rivers W. I. Thomas worship Yahweh
Populære passager
Side 353 - But now bring me a minstrel. And it came to pass, when the minstrel played, that the hand of the LORD came upon him.
Side 350 - And the high places of Isaac shall be desolate, And the sanctuaries of Israel shall be laid waste ; And I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with the sword.
Side 342 - It is a part of the scientific attitude to insist upon the application of analysis and interpretation to all factors and functions of the mental life. It is too much to expect that scientific explanations will not be undertaken simply because the phenomena involved are complex and obscure, or because some persons insist that they are wholly inscrutable. The results of the investigation may be negative or meagre and only partially sustained, but no phenomena of human experience can lay claim to immunity...
Side 316 - The truth of the matter can be put," says Leuba, "in this way: God is not known, he is not understood: he is used — sometimes as meat-purveyor, sometimes as moral support, sometimes as friend, sometimes as an object of love.
Side 240 - I had no idea whatever what the problem of life was. To live with all my might seemed to me easy; to learn where there was so much to learn seemed pleasant and almost of course; to lend a hand, if one had a chance, natural; and if one did this, why, he enjoyed life because he could not help it, and without proving to himself that he ought to enjoy it....
Side 248 - ... objective tests show little or none. At the last end of the plateau the messages on the main line are, according to the unanimous testimony of all who have experience in the matter, a senseless clatter to the student — practically as unintelligible as the same messages were months before. Suddenly, within a few days, the change comes, and the senseless clatter becomes intelligible speech.
Side 82 - In various parts of Europe customs have prevailed both at spring and harvest which are clearly based on the same primitive notion that the relation of the human sexes to each other can be so used as to quicken the growth of plants. For example, in the Ukraine on St. George's Day (the twentythird of April) the priest in his robes, attended by his acolytes, goes out to the fields of the village, where the crops are beginning to show green above the ground, and blesses them. After that the young married...
Side 363 - Sports — hunting, angling, athletic games, and the like — afford an exercise for dexterity and for the emulative ferocity and astuteness characteristic of predatory life. So long as the individual is but slightly gifted with reflection or with a sense of the ulterior trend of his...
Side 146 - This compulsion appears in all its crudeness in the abuse visited upon idols and fetishes when they do not grant what is desired. Tylor recounts stories of worshipers in China who address a faithless idol thus: " ' How now, you dog of a spirit, we have given you an abode in a splendid temple, we gild you and feed you and fumigate you with incense, and yet you are so ungrateful that you won't listen to our prayers.
Side 14 - As there thus seems to be no one elementary religious emotion, but only a common storehouse of emotions upon which religious objects may draw, so there might conceivably also prove to he no one specific and essential kind of religious object, and no one specific and essential kind of religious act.