Category: Psychiatry/Psychology

The Religious Sentiment Its Source and Aim: A Contribution to the Science and Philosophy of Religion

The distinction between the Science and the Philosophy of religion. It is assumed (1) that religions are products of thought, (2) that they have a unity of kind and purpose. They can be studied by the methods of natural science applied to Mind.

Chapters

9. CHAPTER VII.

The records of the past can be studied variously. Events can be arranged in the order of their occurrence: this is chronology or annals; in addition to this, their connections a...

7. CHAPTER V.

Returning again to the definition of the elemental religious sentiment--“a Wish whose fruition depends upon unknown power”--it enables us to class all those notions, opinions an...

3. CHAPTER I.

The Science of Religion is one of the branches of general historical science. It embraces, as the domain of its investigation, all recorded facts relating to the displays of the...

4. CHAPTER II.

The discussion in the last chapter illustrated how closely pain and pleasure, truth and error, and thought and its laws have been related to the forms of religions, and their do...

6. CHAPTER IV.

The foregoing analysis of the religious sentiment results in finding it, even in its simplest forms, a product of complicated reasoning forced into action by some of the stronge...

8. CHAPTER VI.

As the side which a religious system presents to the intellect is shown in the Myth, so the side that it presents to sense is exhibited in the Cult. This includes the representa...

5. CHAPTER III.

In philosophical discussions of religion as well as in popular exhortations upon it, too exclusive stress has been laid upon its emotional elements. “It is,” says Professor Bain...

2. CHAPTER VII.

The distinction between the Science and the Philosophy of religion. It is assumed (1) that religions are products of thought, (2) that they have a unity of kind and purpose. The...

1. CHAPTER I.