The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in the truths of Science and the truths of Religion, is a higher instinct and a truer one than the disposition which leads us to evade the difficulty by pretending that there is no relation between them.... Work of the Future for the Society of Friends - Sayfa 33William Henry Richardson tarafından - 1874 - 47 sayfaTam görünüm - Bu kitap hakkında
| George Douglas Campbell Duke of Argyll - 1867 - 490 sayfa
...no end to the points of contact between our different conceptions of them, of Him, and of ourselves. The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe, and we must believe, both in Nature and in Religion, many things which we cannot understand ; but we... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1867 - 616 sayfa
...the disposition which leads us to evade the difficulty by pretending that there is no relation beween them. For, after all, it is a pretence and nothing...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe, and we must believe, both in Nature and in Religion, many things which we cannot understand; but we... | |
| Josiah Miller - 1870 - 272 sayfa
...point the Duke of Argyll, in his work ' The Reign of Law,' at p. 58 (fifth edition, 1S6S), well says, 'The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe, and we must believe, both in nature and religion, many things which we cannot understand; but we cannot... | |
| 1870 - 682 sayfa
...does but encourage men to accept in each ideas which will at last be proved to be false in both. . . . No man who thoroughly accepts a principle in the philosophy...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe, and we must believe, both in nature and in religion, many things which we cannot understand ; but we... | |
| Charles Hodge, Lyman Hotchkiss Atwater - 1870 - 730 sayfa
...but encourage men to accept in each ideas which will at last be proved to be false, in both. . . . No man who thoroughly accepts a principle in the philosophy...his belief in that doctrine shaken and undermined. "\\re may believe, and we must believe, both in nature and in religion, many tilings which we cannot... | |
| Giles Badger Stebbins - 1872 - 416 sayfa
...no end to the points of contact between our different conceptions of them, of Him and of ourselves. The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe and we must believe, both in Nature and Religion, many things we cannot understand ; but we cannot... | |
| Giles Badger Stebbins - 1872 - 408 sayfa
...no end to the points of contact between our different conceptions of them, of Him and of ourselves. The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe and we must believe, both in Nature and Religion, many things we cannot understand ; but we cannot... | |
| William Edward Winks - 1881 - 290 sayfa
...by Rev. SAMUEL Cox). Relation between Scientific and Religious Truth, and its bearing on Prayer. — The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in...inconsistent with a doctrine of religion, can help having his faith in that doctrine shaken and undermined. . . . It helps us nothing in such a difficulty, to say... | |
| 1883 - 402 sayfa
...their theological views by the fact that some socalled great men are skeptics? We must all admit that "No man who thoroughly accepts a principle in the...his belief in that doctrine shaken and undermined." Now tnat the Doctrines of Development and spontaneous generation have this tendency is evident not... | |
| William George Ward - 1884 - 410 sayfa
...no end to the points of contact between our different conceptions of them, of Him, and of ourselves. The instinct which impels us to seek for harmony in...that doctrine shaken and undermined. We may believe, and we must believe, both in Nature and in Religion, many things which we cannot understand ; but tre... | |
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