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- catalog contributor b3215433.
- catalog created "1883.".
- catalog date "1883".
- catalog date "1883.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1883.".
- catalog description "Aesthetics and Theism -- Erroneous Theories -- XI. The Good: The Fourth Ultimate Reality Known Through the Reason, -- The Question Stated -- Hedonism is False -- The Good Estimated by Reason -- In What the Good Rationally Estimated Consists -- Merit and Demerit -- The feelings Pertaining to the idea of the Good -- Practical Importance in the Conduct of Life -- XII. Fifth Ultimate Idea of Reason, -- The Absolute -- The Pseudo-Absolute -- Personality of the Absolute -- XIII. Three Grades of Scientific Knowledge, -- Definition of Science -- The Three Grades Defined -- Proof of the Doctrine -- Harmony of the Three -- The Alleged Conflict of Natural Science and Theology -- XIV. The Sensibilities, -- The Desire of Happiness as a Motive -- Feeling as a Source of Knowledge -- XV. The Will, -- Definition -- Choice and Volition -- Ethical Application -- Freedom of Will -- Free-will and Man's Implication in Nature -- Different Meanings of Freedom -- The Influence of Motives -- ".
- catalog description "Character in the Will -- The Uniformity of Human Action -- Sociology and Free-will -- XVI. Personality, -- Definitions -- Man is a Person -- Man is Spirit -- XVII. Materialistic Objections to the Existence of Personal Beings, -- First Materialistic Objection; From Sensationalism -- Second Materialistic Objection that Mental Phenomena are Correlated with Molecular Action -- Third Materialistic Objection: From Evolution -- Fourth Materialistic Objection, from Attributes of Brutes -- XVIII. The Two Systems of Nature and Personality, -- A Person's Knowledge of Other Persons -- The Two Systems -- Existence of the Personal God a Necessary Datum of Scientific Knowledge.".
- catalog description "I. Introductory,-Design of the book-Need of it -- II. Knowledge and Agnosticism,-What Knowledge is-Agnosticism-Reality of Knowledge -- Knowledge and Fallibility -- Criteria of Primitive Knowledge -- Knowing, Feeling and Willing -- III. The Acts and Processes of Knowing, -- Classification -- Intuition or Primitive Knowledge -- Representative Knowledge -- Knowledge by Reflection or Thought -- Thought Distinguished by its Objects -- Induction and the Newtonian Method -- Relation of Reflective Thought to Intuition -- Relation of Reflective Thought to Universal Reason -- Probability -- IV. What is known through Presentative Intuition, -- What is Known Through Sense-Perception -- What is known through self-consciousness -- Kant's Thing in itself -- Relativity of Knowledge -- V. What is known through Rational Intuition, -- Universal Principles not Particular Realities -- Rise and Development in Consciousness -- Significance as Regulative -- Validity of Rational Intuitions -- ".
- catalog description "VI. The Ultimate Realities of Human Knowledge, -- Meaning of Ultimate Realities -- Matter and Form -- Classification -- VII. Ultimate Realities Primarily Known in Perceptive Intuition; Being and its modes of Existence, -- Being -- Modes of Existence -- Inferences -- VIII. The True: The First Ultimate idea of Reason, -- The Five Ultimate Ideas of Reason -- The True: The First Norm or Standard of Reason -- IX. The Right, or Law: The Second Ultimate Reality of Reason, -- General Significance of Right or Law -- Ethical Significance of Right and Law -- Moral Law Universal, Immutable, Imperative -- Intuitive Ethics Distinguished from False Theories -- The Formal Principle of the Law and the Real -- Evidence that the Real Principle of the Law is the Law of Love -- X. The Perfect: Third Ultimate Reality or Idea of Reason, -- Origin and Significance of the Idea -- Ideals-Beauty as Known by the Reason, or Principles of Aesthetics -- Aesthetic Emotions -- Aesthetic Culture -- ".
- catalog extent "xxii, 564 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "Philosophical basis of theism.".
- catalog isFormatOf "Philosophical basis of theism.".
- catalog issued "1883".
- catalog issued "1883.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York, Charles Scribner's sons,".
- catalog relation "Philosophical basis of theism.".
- catalog subject "BD555 .H24".
- catalog subject "Knowledge, Theory of.".
- catalog subject "Theism.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Aesthetics and Theism -- Erroneous Theories -- XI. The Good: The Fourth Ultimate Reality Known Through the Reason, -- The Question Stated -- Hedonism is False -- The Good Estimated by Reason -- In What the Good Rationally Estimated Consists -- Merit and Demerit -- The feelings Pertaining to the idea of the Good -- Practical Importance in the Conduct of Life -- XII. Fifth Ultimate Idea of Reason, -- The Absolute -- The Pseudo-Absolute -- Personality of the Absolute -- XIII. Three Grades of Scientific Knowledge, -- Definition of Science -- The Three Grades Defined -- Proof of the Doctrine -- Harmony of the Three -- The Alleged Conflict of Natural Science and Theology -- XIV. The Sensibilities, -- The Desire of Happiness as a Motive -- Feeling as a Source of Knowledge -- XV. The Will, -- Definition -- Choice and Volition -- Ethical Application -- Freedom of Will -- Free-will and Man's Implication in Nature -- Different Meanings of Freedom -- The Influence of Motives -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Character in the Will -- The Uniformity of Human Action -- Sociology and Free-will -- XVI. Personality, -- Definitions -- Man is a Person -- Man is Spirit -- XVII. Materialistic Objections to the Existence of Personal Beings, -- First Materialistic Objection; From Sensationalism -- Second Materialistic Objection that Mental Phenomena are Correlated with Molecular Action -- Third Materialistic Objection: From Evolution -- Fourth Materialistic Objection, from Attributes of Brutes -- XVIII. The Two Systems of Nature and Personality, -- A Person's Knowledge of Other Persons -- The Two Systems -- Existence of the Personal God a Necessary Datum of Scientific Knowledge.".
- catalog tableOfContents "I. Introductory,-Design of the book-Need of it -- II. Knowledge and Agnosticism,-What Knowledge is-Agnosticism-Reality of Knowledge -- Knowledge and Fallibility -- Criteria of Primitive Knowledge -- Knowing, Feeling and Willing -- III. The Acts and Processes of Knowing, -- Classification -- Intuition or Primitive Knowledge -- Representative Knowledge -- Knowledge by Reflection or Thought -- Thought Distinguished by its Objects -- Induction and the Newtonian Method -- Relation of Reflective Thought to Intuition -- Relation of Reflective Thought to Universal Reason -- Probability -- IV. What is known through Presentative Intuition, -- What is Known Through Sense-Perception -- What is known through self-consciousness -- Kant's Thing in itself -- Relativity of Knowledge -- V. What is known through Rational Intuition, -- Universal Principles not Particular Realities -- Rise and Development in Consciousness -- Significance as Regulative -- Validity of Rational Intuitions -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "VI. The Ultimate Realities of Human Knowledge, -- Meaning of Ultimate Realities -- Matter and Form -- Classification -- VII. Ultimate Realities Primarily Known in Perceptive Intuition; Being and its modes of Existence, -- Being -- Modes of Existence -- Inferences -- VIII. The True: The First Ultimate idea of Reason, -- The Five Ultimate Ideas of Reason -- The True: The First Norm or Standard of Reason -- IX. The Right, or Law: The Second Ultimate Reality of Reason, -- General Significance of Right or Law -- Ethical Significance of Right and Law -- Moral Law Universal, Immutable, Imperative -- Intuitive Ethics Distinguished from False Theories -- The Formal Principle of the Law and the Real -- Evidence that the Real Principle of the Law is the Law of Love -- X. The Perfect: Third Ultimate Reality or Idea of Reason, -- Origin and Significance of the Idea -- Ideals-Beauty as Known by the Reason, or Principles of Aesthetics -- Aesthetic Emotions -- Aesthetic Culture -- ".
- catalog title "The philosophical basis of theism; an examination of the personality of man to ascertain his capacity to know and serve God, and the validity of the principles underlying the defence of theism, by Samuel Harris.".
- catalog type "text".