. . . . . . . . "[The Religious Feeling: a study for faith.]"@en . "[The Religious Feeling: a study for faith.]" . . . "The religious feeling a study for faith"@en . "The religious feeling a study for faith" . . "\"In the struggle for existence which is ever going on in literature, as in life, a new book should show some variation, however slight, from others of its kind, by means of which it may be better fitted to the surrounding conditions of thought, and hope to survive for a season. The reason this little book has for its appearance is a slight departure from the usual forms in which the evidences of faith are presented, by which it is sought to adapt them more perfectly to the sceptical surroundings of thought in our day. The variation by which this new venture, among the great multitude of books, hopes to live and to be useful, may be said to be the result of a process of natural selection, in an American mind, from the German idealism, and the English positivism. The substance of it first formed itself in the author's mind during a season of quiet study of modern German thought, and he has since found the reasoning, which then enabled his own faith to survive, useful in conversation with friends whose scientific studies had both brought them into unwilling doubts concerning those spiritual truths which give to life its real value, and, at the same time, thrown the prevalent proofs of religion out of all relation to their habits of mind\"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)."@en . "\"In the struggle for existence which is ever going on in literature, as in life, a new book should show some variation, however slight, from others of its kind, by means of which it may be better fitted to the surrounding conditions of thought, and hope to survive for a season. The reason this little book has for its appearance is a slight departure from the usual forms in which the evidences of faith are presented, by which it is sought to adapt them more perfectly to the sceptical surroundings of thought in our day. The variation by which this new venture, among the great multitude of books, hopes to live and to be useful, may be said to be the result of a process of natural selection, in an American mind, from the German idealism, and the English positivism. The substance of it first formed itself in the author's mind during a season of quiet study of modern German thought, and he has since found the reasoning, which then enabled his own faith to survive, useful in conversation with friends whose scientific studies had both brought them into unwilling doubts concerning those spiritual truths which give to life its real value, and, at the same time, thrown the prevalent proofs of religion out of all relation to their habits of mind\"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)." . . . . "The religious feeling : A study for faith" . . . . . . "The religious feeling : a study for faith"@en . . "Religious feeling; a study for faith"@en . "Religious feeling a study for faith" . . . . "The Religious Feeling: a study for faith"@en . . . . . . . . . "The religious feeling. A study for faith" . "The religious feeling. A study for faith"@en . . . "American Psychological Association." . . . . "Religion & psykologi" . . "Religion & psykologi." . "Religion." . . "Faith." . . "Faith" . "Foi." . .