Two Lectures on Theism: Delivered on the Occasion of the Sesquicentennial Celebration of Princeton University |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 6
Page 12
... ideal- ists who developed the philosophy of Kant , more especially upon Schelling and Hegel . Empha- size their minor differences from him as they may , he is yet to them the greatest figure in modern philosophy . Instead of his atheism ...
... ideal- ists who developed the philosophy of Kant , more especially upon Schelling and Hegel . Empha- size their minor differences from him as they may , he is yet to them the greatest figure in modern philosophy . Instead of his atheism ...
Page 26
... ; he is not represented as the source of the ideal which it sets up within us . He is simply , as it were , the official of the law , the instrument for carrying out the demands which the ethical consciousness makes . 26 THEISM.
... ; he is not represented as the source of the ideal which it sets up within us . He is simply , as it were , the official of the law , the instrument for carrying out the demands which the ethical consciousness makes . 26 THEISM.
Page 27
... ideal . Against that view , Kant rightly insists on the necessity that the law shall be self - imposed , if it is to carry with it an authority against which there is no appeal . He does not fully see , how- ever , that if its ...
... ideal . Against that view , Kant rightly insists on the necessity that the law shall be self - imposed , if it is to carry with it an authority against which there is no appeal . He does not fully see , how- ever , that if its ...
Page 31
... ideal of goodness , which in itself is the most real of realities . The ideal is not communicated to all men in the same form , or to the earlier ages with the same fulness as to the later ; for it is the nature of morality to be a ...
... ideal of goodness , which in itself is the most real of realities . The ideal is not communicated to all men in the same form , or to the earlier ages with the same fulness as to the later ; for it is the nature of morality to be a ...
Page 32
... ideal , were the creation of his own spirit . And he then bows down and worships himself as a god in a godless world . These , however , are but the two sides of the shield which may be opposed to one another to all eternity . All moral ...
... ideal , were the creation of his own spirit . And he then bows down and worships himself as a god in a godless world . These , however , are but the two sides of the shield which may be opposed to one another to all eternity . All moral ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Absolute agnosticism Author Bart Blackwood Book Bradley Bradley's century Cheap Uniform Edition Cheaper Edition Christian Church of Scotland cloth College Crown 4to Crown 8vo D.Sc deism Demy 8vo divine doctrine ence English Verse Engravings Essays eternal ethical experience Fcap Fifth Edition finite existence Fourth Edition French morocco full-page George GERARD Hamley Hegel Hegelian higher History human infinite J. G. Lockhart JAMES JOHN Kant Kant's Lady LAPWORTH Lectures LL.D LOCKHART Lord Manual Maps Memoir MISS MARJORIBANKS Modern nature numerous Illustrations OLIPHANT pantheism paper cover Parish philo Photogravure Plates Poems POPULAR EDITION Portrait Post 8vo Professor of Logic Professor of Moral R. D. BLACKMORE reality Religion Revised and Enlarged Romance Scot Scottish Second Edition Society of Scotland speculation Spinoza spirit St Andrews Stories Theism theology theory things Third Edition thought tion Translated true truth unity University of Edinburgh University of Glasgow VEITCH vols Volumes WILLIAM
Popular passages
Page 25 - All things come alike to all: there is one event to the righteous and to the wicked; to the good, and to the clean, and to the unclean; to him that sacrificeth, and to him that sacrificeth not: as is the good, so is the sinner; and he that sweareth, as he that feareth an oath.
Page 4 - HAMILTON. Lectures on Metaphysics. By Sir WILLIAM HAMILTON, Bart. , Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh. Edited by the Rev. HL MANSEL, BD, LL.D., Dean of St Paul's ; and JOHN VEITCH, MA, Professor of Logic and Rhetoric, Glasgow.
Page 67 - ALISON. History of Europe. By Sir ARCHIBALD ALISON. Bart., DCL 1. From the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Battle of Waterloo. LIBRARY EDITION, 14 vols., with Portraits. Demy 8vo, £10, 10s.