An Introduction to the History of ReligionMethuen, 1902 - 443 sider |
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Side 5
... beginning , and therefore cannot be the outcome of evolution . Every step taken in religion by man since Adam , if it was not in the right line of monotheism , must have been away from the truth of revealed religion ; the only evolution ...
... beginning , and therefore cannot be the outcome of evolution . Every step taken in religion by man since Adam , if it was not in the right line of monotheism , must have been away from the truth of revealed religion ; the only evolution ...
Side 8
... beginning of the process of evolution - the process cannot begin without it . The belief that the course of the world is directed by divine agency and personal will , is one the existence of which the historian , even if he could not ...
... beginning of the process of evolution - the process cannot begin without it . The belief that the course of the world is directed by divine agency and personal will , is one the existence of which the historian , even if he could not ...
Side 10
... beginnings ; but even the barbaric artist is feeling after the ideal if peradventure he may find it . In the case of science , the continuum which , however fine and long drawn out , yet links the savant to the savage , is their common ...
... beginnings ; but even the barbaric artist is feeling after the ideal if peradventure he may find it . In the case of science , the continuum which , however fine and long drawn out , yet links the savant to the savage , is their common ...
Side 15
... beginning , have long survived without them , if at all . But as there must have been one weapon which was the first to be made , one fire which was the first ever kindled , we must either infer that for a time man was without fire and ...
... beginning , have long survived without them , if at all . But as there must have been one weapon which was the first to be made , one fire which was the first ever kindled , we must either infer that for a time man was without fire and ...
Side 18
... beginning there were some sequences of phenomena , some laws which man had observed , and the occurrence of which he took as a matter of course and regarded as natural . Or putting ourselves at the practical point of view - the only ...
... beginning there were some sequences of phenomena , some laws which man had observed , and the occurrence of which he took as a matter of course and regarded as natural . Or putting ourselves at the practical point of view - the only ...
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altar amongst ancestor ancestor-worship ancient Athenian BARING GOULD Bastian become belief blood ceremony chapter civilised clan clansmen communion consciousness Crown 8vo cult custom dead death deceased deity Demeter Demy 8vo Dionysus divine E. V. LUCAS Egypt Eleusinian Eleusis Ellis evolution existence explanation fact Fcap feast fetish flesh Frazer goddess gods Greece Greek H. C. BEECHING human Iacchus Ibid idea idol Illustrated Indians individual inference king LUCAS MALET magic maize man's Mary Findlater meal Mensch MESSRS METHUEN'S CATALOGUE monotheism moral mysteries myth natural offered original Persephone person plant Polynesia polytheism priest primitive reason religion religious rites ritual sacramental sacred sacrifice savage Second Edition Semites soul species spirit stage stone supernatural supernatural powers Supra survival sympathetic magic taboo theory thiasus things taboo tion totem animal tree tribe Tshi-speaking unclean victim W. W. JACOBS worship Zagreus Zeus καὶ
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Side 45 - PASSAGES FOR UNSEEN TRANSLATION. By EC MARCHANT, MA, Fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge; and AM COOK, MA, late Scholar of Wadham College, Oxford; Assistant Masters at St. Paul's School. Crown 81/0. y. 6d. ' We know no book of this class better fitted for use in the higher forms of schools.
Side 7 - The Westminster Commentaries General Editor. WALTER LOCK, DD, Warden of Keble College, Dean Ireland's Professor of Exegesis in the University of Oxford. The object of each commentary is primarily exegetical, to interpret the author's meaning to the present generation.
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Side 30 - We welcome with the utmost satisfaction a new, cheaper, and more convenient edition of Dr. Gibson's book. It was greatly wanted. Dr. Gibson has given theological students just what they want, and we should like to think that it was in the hands of every candidate for orders.
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