We can find no province of the world so low but the Absolute inhabits it. Nowhere is there even a single fact so fragmentary and so poor that to the universe it does not matter. There is truth in every idea however false, there is reality in every existence... Appearance and Reality: A Metaphysical Essay - Page 487by Francis Herbert Bradley - 1897 - 628 pagesFull view - About this book
| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1893 - 588 pages
...which is more than itself. Hence appearance is ~ error, if you will, but not every error is illusion. 1 At each stage is involved the principle of that which...where we can point to reality or truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute. Appearance without reality would be impossible, for what then could... | |
| Francis Herbert Bradley - 1920 - 662 pages
...opposite ; for that which is identified with the Absolute is no appearance but is utter reality. But have seen the solution of this puzzle, and we know...where we can point to reality or truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute. Appearance without reality would be impossible, for what then could... | |
| Walter Sylvester Gamertsfelder - 1920 - 116 pages
...its special appearances; though present everywhere again in different value and degrees." 11 Again, "we can find no province of the world so low but the...there is reality in every existence however slight." 12 Prof. Bosanquet in a similar tone says, "It is a mistake to treat the finite world, or pain, or... | |
| Walter Sylvester Gamertsfelder - 1920 - 120 pages
...its special appearances; though present everywhere again in different value and degrees."11 Again, "we can find no province of the world so low but the...false, there is reality in every existence however slight."12 Prof. Bosanquet in a similar tone says, "It is a mistake to treat the finite world, or pain,... | |
| Benjamin Rand - 1924 - 924 pages
...Perfection. Every attitude of experience, every sphere or level of the world, is a necessary façtgr in the Absolute. Each in its own way satisfies, until...where we can point to reality or truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute. Appearance without reality would be impossible, for what then could... | |
| Basil Alfred Yeaxlee - 1925 - 356 pages
...starting point for any enquiry into the nature of ultimate reality — the tremendous conclusion that " We can find no province of the world so low but the...however slight ; and, where we can point to reality and truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute." Our scale of values is constantly corrected... | |
| Sister Mary Verda - 1926 - 216 pages
...aspect most opposed to self-independence and unity. ... (It is but) 'one element within the Whole'." " "There is truth in every idea however false, there...where we can point to reality or truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute. Appearance without reality would be impossible, for what then could... | |
| Leemon B. McHenry - 1992 - 236 pages
...together in a larger Whole that we understand how every single appearance survives in the result. He says: "We can find no province of the world so low but the...so poor that to the universe it does not matter." 9 So, on the one hand, transmutation and perfection in the final unity seems to demand that the constituent... | |
| Lyndall Gordon - 1999 - 760 pages
...irreconcilable worlds of appearance and reality; Bradley insisted the two were linked; also that there was 'no province of the world so low but the Absolute...so poor that to the universe it does not matter.' Eliot, who had seen appearances dissolve, was perhaps comforted by Bradley's firm statement: 'We may... | |
| Benjamin Rand - 1924 - 920 pages
...Metaphysical Essay. London, George Allen & Unwin Ltd.; New York, The Macmillan Co 1893; 2 ed, 1897. degree contains a vital function of Perfection. Every...where we can point to reality or truth, there is the one undivided life of the Absolute. Appearance without reality would be impossible, for what then could... | |
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