Natural Religion and Christian Theology: An Introductory Study |
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Page 24
... feeling of uncanniness that arises in certain places and in unusual situations , the fear of death , the terrifying spectacle of a great machine - all these give experiences that clutch at the heart and are not to be explained by the ...
... feeling of uncanniness that arises in certain places and in unusual situations , the fear of death , the terrifying spectacle of a great machine - all these give experiences that clutch at the heart and are not to be explained by the ...
Page 38
... feeling from which it has taken its origin . Doctrine , however , may correspond to feeling , but the feeling may be an unworthy one , and the more closely doctrine agrees with it the more dangerous does it become . The unconscious has ...
... feeling from which it has taken its origin . Doctrine , however , may correspond to feeling , but the feeling may be an unworthy one , and the more closely doctrine agrees with it the more dangerous does it become . The unconscious has ...
Page 111
... feeling that we can communi- cate with reality and the business of feeling is to transform this outward world into a world of inwardness . And yet the perfection of feeling leads to a loss of personal identity , so that reality is ...
... feeling that we can communi- cate with reality and the business of feeling is to transform this outward world into a world of inwardness . And yet the perfection of feeling leads to a loss of personal identity , so that reality is ...
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Natural Religion and Christian Theology: An Introductory Study Albert Victor Murray Limited preview - 1956 |
Common terms and phrases
accept action animal anthropology appear attitude Barth become believed called Catholic characteristic Christ Christian theology Church comes communion concerned conscious consideration course dead development of religion divine doctrine dogma Dogmatik existence explain fact factor Faust feeling Freud G. G. Coulton give gods Gospel Hebrew human nature idea ideal importance instance instinct institutions intellectual interpretation Jesus Jung Karl Barth kind living man's means mind modern moral mystery natural religion natural theology never Old Testament oneself ourselves person physical prevenient grace principle Protestantism psychological raw material realize reason recognition recognize relations relationship religious experience revelation Roman sacrament seek seen self-surrender sense social society soul speak spirit world spiritual survival T. F. Torrance T. S. Eliot term Testament theologian thing thought tribal land tribe true truth uncon unconscious unconscious mind universe unseen world words