Religious Thought in the Nineteenth Century: Illustrated from Writers of the Period |
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Schleiermacher | 39 |
Hegel | 61 |
Feuerbach | 82 |
Lotze | 125 |
Ritschl | 138 |
Harnack | 149 |
Lamennais | 184 |
Newman | 269 |
Mansel | 288 |
s J S Mill | 297 |
Benjamin Jowett and Essays and Reviews page | 309 |
Matthew Arnold | 324 |
Scott Holland and Lux Mundi | 338 |
The British Hegelians | 352 |
IO Emerson | 374 |
Auguste Comte | 196 |
Auguste Sabatier | 208 |
Solovyov | 218 |
Coleridge | 239 |
F D Maurice | 254 |
Josiah Royce | 381 |
William James | 392 |
405 | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract according action activity actual appear authority become beginning believe called character Christ Christian Church conception concerned consciousness consequently course critical definite determined direct distinction divine doctrine dogma doubt element essential evidence existence experience expression external fact faith feeling finite force give given Gospel ground hand Hence highest human idea ideal immediate individual infinite influence intellectual interest interpretation Jesus kind knowledge less limited living man's matter means merely mind moral nature necessary never notion object once original Paradox particular perfect philosophy positive possible practical predicates present principle purely question rational reality realized reason recognized regard relation religion religious remains represented result revelation scientific sense society soul spirit theology things thinking thought true truth understanding unity universal whole