Human Immortality: Two Supposed Objections to the DoctrineHoughton, Mifflin and Company, 1898 - 70 pages |
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abstract anatomists appointment association-centres BOOK brain-action brain's function centres connection consciousness consequence continuity crests discontinuity duction ence entity eral ergy exceed expressed facts Fechner Fechner's feeling always goes fibres finite Flechsig frontal functional dependence gastric juice gether HARVARD UNIVERSITY Heaven hereafter human individual Ingersoll lecture INGERSOLL LECTURESHIP inner kind of function Leipzig light limited lives logic lower mankind Mate material matter mental mind natural nerves ness NOTE notion particular pathologists pheno phenomena philosophy physiological physiologist possible power of sym preëxists PRINCIPLES OF PSYCHOLOGY production-theory prophet clad psychic resultant Psychical Research psycho PSYCHOLOGY quantitative imagination rialism rise Riverside Press sciousness sensation sort soul soul's Sphinx spiritual stream of feelings strict logic suppose sure theory number theory of production things thought tion total wave trans transcendental transmission-theory transmissive function truth ture under-wave unified or simple universe veil wave-scheme whole WILLIAM JAMES
Popular passages
Page 16 - The One remains, the many change and pass; Heaven's light forever shines, Earth's shadows fly; Life, like a dome of many-colored glass, Stains the white radiance of Eternity, Until Death tramples it to fragments.
Page 58 - We lie in the lap of immense intelligence, which makes us receivers of its truth and organs of its activity. When we discern justice, when we discern truth, we do nothing of ourselves, but allow a passage to its beams.
Page 56 - How this metamorphosis takes place; how a force existing as motion, heat, or light can become a mode of consciousness...
Page 12 - The supposed impossibility of its continuing comes from too superficial a look at the admitted fact of functional dependence. The moment we inquire more closely into the notion of functional dependence, and ask ourselves, for example, how many kinds of functional dependence there may be, we immediately perceive that there is one kind at least that does not exclude a life hereafter at all. The fatal conclusion of the physiologist flows from his assuming offhand another kind of functional dependence,...
Page 15 - Suppose, for example, that the whole universe of material things — the furniture of earth and choir of heaven — should turn out to be a mere surface-veil of phenomena, hiding and keeping back the world of genuine realities.
Page 42 - God, we can then say, has so inexhaustible a capacity for love that his call and need is for a literally endless accumulation of created lives. He can never faint or grow weary, as we should, under the increasing supply. His scale is infinite in all things. His sympathy can never know satiety or glut.
Page 13 - Thought is a function of the brain," he thinks of the matter just as he thinks when he says, "Steam is a function of the tea-kettle.
Page 33 - Given over to fearful crime and passion, plunged in the blackest ignorance, preyed upon by hideous and grotesque delusions, yet steadfastly serving the profoundest of ideals in their fixed faith that existence in any form is better than non-existence, they ever rescued triumphantly from the jaws of ever-imminent destruction the torch of life, which thanks to them now lights the world for us.