Our EternityDodd, Mead, 1913 - 258 頁 |
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常見字詞
abyss admit become believe birth body boundless CHAPTER Colonel de Rochas communications conceive cosmic consciousness cross correspondence darkness dead death dread dreams earth eternity everything existence experiments eyes F. W. H. Myers facts familiar spirits fate Florence Cook happiness Hodgson human hypothesis idea imagination impossible imposture incomprehensible infinite infinity instance intelligence Joséphine least less limits living longer manifestations matter MAURICE MAETERLINCK medium meets in infinity memory mind Myers mystery naught never nothingness ourselves pain perceive perhaps phenomena Piper possess possible present probable proof question reason recognize reincarnation religions remain replies revelations Richard Hodgson riddle scientific seems senses side Sir Oliver Lodge Sir William Crookes sleep sorrow sort of consciousness space speak spirit spiritualistic Stainton Moses subliminal sufferings survival telepathy theosophists theosophy thing thought thousand to-day torture truth understand unhappy universe unknown Voiron wherein William James word
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第 203 頁 - By continually seeking to know and being continually thrown back with a deepened conviction of the impossibility of knowing, we may keep alive the consciousness that it is alike our highest wisdom and our highest duty to regard that through which all things exist as The Unknowable.
第 224 頁 - Carboniferous era. The motions of organic beings would be so slow to our senses as to be inferred, not seen. The sun would stand still in the sky, the moon be almost free from change, and so on. But now reverse the hypothesis and suppose a being to get only one...
第 197 頁 - Nought loves another as itself, Nor venerates another so, Nor is it possible to Thought A greater than itself to know: » And Father, how can I love you Or any of my brothers more? I love you like the little bird That picks up crumbs around the door.
第 203 頁 - Perpetually to construct ideas requiring the utmost stretch of our faculties, and perpetually to find that such ideas must be abandoned as futile imaginations, may realize to us more fully than any other course, the greatness of that which we vainly strive to grasp.
第 9 頁 - All the doctors consider it their first duty to protract as long as possible even the most excruciating convulsions of the most hopeless agony. Who has not, at a bedside, twenty times wished, and not once dared, to throw himself at their feet and implore them to show mercy? They are filled with so great...
第 95 頁 - ... crucial' way. But watching my mind work as it goes over the data, convinces me that exact logic plays only a preparatory part in shaping our conclusions here; and that the decisive vote, if there be one, has to be cast by what I may call one's general sense of dramatic probability, which sense ebbs and flows from one hypothesis to another — it does so in the present writer at least — in a rather illogical manner. If one sticks to the detail, one may draw an anti-spiritist conclusion; if one...
第 19 頁 - They declare, in expounding it to the world, that it is a foolishness, stultitiam? and then you complain that they do not prove it! If they proved it, they would not keep their word; it is in lacking proofs that they are not lacking in sense.
第 63 頁 - It is not improbable that other sentient beings have organs of sense which do not respond to some or any of the rays to which our eyes are sensitive, but are able to appreciate other vibrations to which we are blind. Such beings would practically be living in a different world to our own. Imagine, for instance, what idea we should form of surrounding objects were we endowed with eyes not sensitive to the ordinary rays of light, but sensitive to the vibrations concerned in electric and magnetic phenomena....
第 177 頁 - ... environment, just as the other ego, on this earth, nourished itself and throve on all that it met there. Since we have been able to acquire our present consciousness, why should it be impossible for us to acquire another? For that ego which is so dear to us and which we believe ourselves to possess was not made in a day ; it is not at present what it was at the hour of our birth. Much more chance than purpose has entered into it; and much more alien substance than any inborn substance which it...
第 28 頁 - ... through its darkness — for man has the right to hope for that which he does not yet conceive — the only point that interests us, because it is situated in the little circle which our...