or putting it on a level with the animal world in general, the doctrine of evolution shows us distinctly for the first time how the creation and the perfecting of man is the goal towards which Nature's work has been tending from the first. We can now... The End of Education - Page 10by Daniel Edward Phillips - 1894 - 22 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1885 - 568 pages
...position of man; that it shows us distinctly for the first time, how the creation and perfection of man is the goal towards which nature's work has been tending from the first. He has strong fa! : 11 in immortality — is almost irresistably driven to the conclusion that... | |
| Alexander Balmain Bruce - 1886 - 404 pages
...doctrine of evolution shows us distinctly for the first time how the creation and the perfecting of man is the goal towards which Nature's work has been tending from the first. We can now see clearly that our new knowledge enlarges tenfold the significance of human life,... | |
| Alexander Balmain Bruce - 1892 - 560 pages
...religious experience. —Lehrbuch der Dogmatik, p. 231. how the creation and the perfecting of man is the goal towards which Nature's work has been tending from the first. We can now see clearly that our new knowledge enlarges tenfold the significance of human life,... | |
| Bernard Lucas - 1904 - 328 pages
...doctrine of evolution shows us distinctly for the first time how the creation and perfecting of man is the goal towards which Nature's work has been tending from the first. We can now see clearly that our new knowledge enlarges tenfold the significance of human life,... | |
| |