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- catalog contributor b3226788.
- catalog created "[1951]".
- catalog date "1951".
- catalog date "[1951]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1951]".
- catalog description "17. Spencer's statement of Froude's pessimism -- 18. Professor Romanes pessimism while an unbeliever -- 19. Mark Twain's pessimism -- 20. The pessimism of Schopenhauer -- 21. Charles Darwin -- 22. Teller's pessimistic view of life -- 23. Pessimists cannot logically hope for annihilation -- 24. The pessimists belie their words -- 25. Conclusions concerning the pessimism of unbelief -- Chapter V: The moral consequences of unbelief -- 1. A practical demonstration that atheism has no moral power or moral provisions -- 2. Atheism removes the very basis of morality -- 3. Atheism destroys respect for morality by making it something other than morality -- 4. Unbelief destroys morality by defining it as what men think is right or wrong -- 5. Might becomes the only standard of right -- 6. Happiness here and now made the goal of life -- 7. Happiness as the supreme end of life leads to stagnation and decay -- 8. Happiness as the end of life has no moral quality within itself -- ".
- catalog description "8. The atheist must believe that mind, thought, and the power of speech have arisen spontaneously out of a peculiar, chance combination of matter -- 9. The atheist must believe that man is a machine without any responsibility for his own conduct -- 10. The atheist, when consistent, must believe that there are no moral values or ideals -- 11. The atheist makes all thought irrational -- 12. The atheist must believe that even the highest religion is an illusion -- Chapter III: The crisis in the world of thought -- Chapter IV: The pessimism of unbelief -- 1. Swinburne on the common fate of all -- 2. James Thomson, the pessimistic poet -- 3. David Hume's pessimism -- 4. Diderot, the French philosopher -- 5. Shelley the poet -- 6. Byron -- 7. H. G. Wells -- 8. Buchner's pessimism -- 9. Ingersoll's pessimism and hope when at his brother's grave -- 10. Voltaire -- 11. Hume -- 12. Strauss -- 13. Professor Seeley -- 14. Anatole France -- 15. Bertrand Russel -- 16. Emily Pfeifer's poem -- ".
- catalog description "9. Atheism leads to a low view of human life -- 10. Atheism eliminates morality with reference to sex -- 11. Watkinson on the influence of unbelief on character -- 12. Man has no freedom of will says Teller -- 13. Bertrand Russell -- I. Man is merely a part of nature -- II. There is no God and man is not immortal -- III. Russell has no real moral standard in his philosophy -- 14. Faith in God makes life possible for the atheist -- 15. The atheist fears the judgment -- Chapter VI: Atheism: a mother of superstition -- 1. The 4 'A' religionists 2. Comte's religion of humanity -- 3. Religious nationalism -- 4. Communism as a religion -- 5. The worship of a man -- Chapter VII: what they give us in place of faith in God -- Appendix I: Francis Bacon on atheism".
- catalog description "Chapter I: are they rationalists? -- 1. The Christian is rational -- 2. The unbeliever is a believer -- 3. Why the unbeliever must be a believer -- 4. Why it is important to consider the beliefs of unbelief -- Chapter II: the beliefs of atheism -- 1. The atheist cannot prove that God does not exist -- 2. The atheist finds his own creed difficult to believe -- 3. The atheist may scoff at the idea of an eternal God but he must assume that matter has existed eternally -- 4. The materialist does not know any more about nature of matter itself than the Christian does -- 5. The atheist, in order to get life out of the non-living matter, must believe in the miracle of spontaneous generation -- 6. The atheist believes that the order evidenced in nature and I man is the result of chance or of something labeled fate or law; that intelligence had nothing to do with it -- 7. The atheist believes that consciousness arose out of a non-intelligent combination of non-conscious matter -- ".
- catalog extent "176 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Atheism's faith and fruits.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Atheism's faith and fruits.".
- catalog issued "1951".
- catalog issued "[1951]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Boston, W. A. Wilde Co.".
- catalog relation "Atheism's faith and fruits.".
- catalog subject "239.7".
- catalog subject "Apologetics".
- catalog subject "Atheism Controversial literature.".
- catalog subject "Atheism.".
- catalog subject "BT1210 .B34".
- catalog tableOfContents "17. Spencer's statement of Froude's pessimism -- 18. Professor Romanes pessimism while an unbeliever -- 19. Mark Twain's pessimism -- 20. The pessimism of Schopenhauer -- 21. Charles Darwin -- 22. Teller's pessimistic view of life -- 23. Pessimists cannot logically hope for annihilation -- 24. The pessimists belie their words -- 25. Conclusions concerning the pessimism of unbelief -- Chapter V: The moral consequences of unbelief -- 1. A practical demonstration that atheism has no moral power or moral provisions -- 2. Atheism removes the very basis of morality -- 3. Atheism destroys respect for morality by making it something other than morality -- 4. Unbelief destroys morality by defining it as what men think is right or wrong -- 5. Might becomes the only standard of right -- 6. Happiness here and now made the goal of life -- 7. Happiness as the supreme end of life leads to stagnation and decay -- 8. Happiness as the end of life has no moral quality within itself -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "8. The atheist must believe that mind, thought, and the power of speech have arisen spontaneously out of a peculiar, chance combination of matter -- 9. The atheist must believe that man is a machine without any responsibility for his own conduct -- 10. The atheist, when consistent, must believe that there are no moral values or ideals -- 11. The atheist makes all thought irrational -- 12. The atheist must believe that even the highest religion is an illusion -- Chapter III: The crisis in the world of thought -- Chapter IV: The pessimism of unbelief -- 1. Swinburne on the common fate of all -- 2. James Thomson, the pessimistic poet -- 3. David Hume's pessimism -- 4. Diderot, the French philosopher -- 5. Shelley the poet -- 6. Byron -- 7. H. G. Wells -- 8. Buchner's pessimism -- 9. Ingersoll's pessimism and hope when at his brother's grave -- 10. Voltaire -- 11. Hume -- 12. Strauss -- 13. Professor Seeley -- 14. Anatole France -- 15. Bertrand Russel -- 16. Emily Pfeifer's poem -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "9. Atheism leads to a low view of human life -- 10. Atheism eliminates morality with reference to sex -- 11. Watkinson on the influence of unbelief on character -- 12. Man has no freedom of will says Teller -- 13. Bertrand Russell -- I. Man is merely a part of nature -- II. There is no God and man is not immortal -- III. Russell has no real moral standard in his philosophy -- 14. Faith in God makes life possible for the atheist -- 15. The atheist fears the judgment -- Chapter VI: Atheism: a mother of superstition -- 1. The 4 'A' religionists 2. Comte's religion of humanity -- 3. Religious nationalism -- 4. Communism as a religion -- 5. The worship of a man -- Chapter VII: what they give us in place of faith in God -- Appendix I: Francis Bacon on atheism".
- catalog tableOfContents "Chapter I: are they rationalists? -- 1. The Christian is rational -- 2. The unbeliever is a believer -- 3. Why the unbeliever must be a believer -- 4. Why it is important to consider the beliefs of unbelief -- Chapter II: the beliefs of atheism -- 1. The atheist cannot prove that God does not exist -- 2. The atheist finds his own creed difficult to believe -- 3. The atheist may scoff at the idea of an eternal God but he must assume that matter has existed eternally -- 4. The materialist does not know any more about nature of matter itself than the Christian does -- 5. The atheist, in order to get life out of the non-living matter, must believe in the miracle of spontaneous generation -- 6. The atheist believes that the order evidenced in nature and I man is the result of chance or of something labeled fate or law; that intelligence had nothing to do with it -- 7. The atheist believes that consciousness arose out of a non-intelligent combination of non-conscious matter -- ".
- catalog title "Atheism's faith and fruits.".
- catalog type "text".