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The Meaning of God in Human Experience : A Philosophic Study of Religion

By Hocking, William Ernest

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Book Id: WPLBN0001854732
Format Type: PDF eBook
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Reproduction Date: 2010

Title: The Meaning of God in Human Experience : A Philosophic Study of Religion  
Author: Hocking, William Ernest
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Religion, God, Theology
Collections: American Libraries Collection
Historic
Publication Date:
1912
Publisher: New Haven; Yale University Press

Citation

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Ernest, 1873-196, H. W. (1912). The Meaning of God in Human Experience : A Philosophic Study of Religion. Retrieved from http://self.gutenberg.org/


Description
Includes bibliographical references and index; Religion as seen in its effects. How the nature of religion may be known ; The work of religion in history ; The traits of religion in persons -- Religious feeling and religious theory. The retirement of the intellect ; Religion's dilemma in respect to theory ; The destiny of feeling ; How ideas of ideas misrepresent them ; The alleged finitude of ideas ; The retreat into subjectivity ; The idea-world in its aim toward freedom from feeling ; Idea inorganic union with feeling ; The will as a maker of truth -- The need of God. The need of unity : monism as bearing on optimism ; The need of an absolute : reflections on its practical worth ; The need of a God -- How men know God. The original sources of the knowledge of God ; The knowledge of other minds than our own ; Such knowledge as we could desire ; That knowledge we have ; Our natural realism and realism absolute ; The God of nature and the knowledge of man ; The ontological argument for the existence of God ; Development of the knowledge of God -- Worship and the mystics. Thought and worship ; Preliminary doubts of the worth of worship ; The mystic's preparation : the negative path ; The psychology of mysticism ; The psychology of mysticism : the principle of alternation ; Prayer and its answer -- The fruits of religion. Peculiar knowledge and certainty : revelation and dogma ; The creativity of religion : theory of inspiration ; The prophetic consciousness ; the unifying of history -- Explanatory notes and essays. Note on the subconscious ; The relations between idea and value understood through biology ; The knowledge of independent reality ; Note on Leuba's theory of the nature of the mystic's love of God

Summary
Contributor: University of Connecticut Libraries ; The digitization of this title was sponsored by University of Connecticut Libraries

 
 



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