Memoirs of the Society for Philosophical Inquiry of Washington, D.C.: 1893/1901-1909/27, المجلدات 1-4Society., 1893 |
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الصفحة 239
... Divine Comedy is one of those rare and solemn monuments of the mind's power which measure and test what it can reach to . " Charles Eliot Norton says : " There are few other works of man , perhaps there is no other , which affords such ...
... Divine Comedy is one of those rare and solemn monuments of the mind's power which measure and test what it can reach to . " Charles Eliot Norton says : " There are few other works of man , perhaps there is no other , which affords such ...
الصفحة 241
... Divine Comedy . The poem was begun in 1300 and finished in 1321. It is the product of many years of reading , meditation and study . It was chiefly written when Dante lived in exile . His banishment gave him time to ponder and plan , to ...
... Divine Comedy . The poem was begun in 1300 and finished in 1321. It is the product of many years of reading , meditation and study . It was chiefly written when Dante lived in exile . His banishment gave him time to ponder and plan , to ...
الصفحة 252
... Divine Being in any mysterious way in cooperation with the nature of that Divine Being , in the full confidence that the personality of the Deity , though infinitely more complex than the personality of his creature or his humble helper ...
... Divine Being in any mysterious way in cooperation with the nature of that Divine Being , in the full confidence that the personality of the Deity , though infinitely more complex than the personality of his creature or his humble helper ...
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Agnosticism applied April Aristotle atoms believe Bigelow cause Coleman Columbian University conception consciousness considered Critique Dante Descartes discussion divine Divine Comedy doctrine dualism Edward Edward E element especially ethical existence experience fact Farquhar February Harris Hegel Howard read human Hume idea ideal intellectual intuition January January 17 Kant Kant's Kantian Kepler Hoyt Kirk knowledge L. F. Ward logical MACBRIDE STERRETT matter ment mental metaphysical method mind monism moral motion nature November object phenomena philosophy physical Plato position Powell Pragmatism present President Sterrett principle Prof Professor psychic psychology Purgatory Pyrrho question Raymond read a paper reality referred regarded Regular Meeting relation religion remarks Richardson scientific sensation sense Sewall Shakespeare Society for Philosophical soul space Special Meeting spiritual Steele substance Swedenborg symbol teleology theory things thinking thought tion true truth ultimate universe Walda Heywat