| 1870 - 764 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere, we find expressed or implied the belief that each...continues capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends.1 (1) A critical reader may raise an objection. If animal-worship is to be rationally interpreted,... | |
| 1870 - 770 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere, we find expressed or implied the belief that each...continues capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends.1 (1) A critical reader may raise an objection. If animal-worship is to be rationally interpreted,... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1871 - 272 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere wo find expressed or implied the belief that each person is double ; and that when he dies, his other soli', whether remaining near at hand or gone far away, may return, and continues capable of injuring... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1873 - 386 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning . it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere we find expressed or implied the belief that each...capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends. 1 1 A critical rcader may raise an objection. If animal-worship is to be rationally interpreted, how... | |
| 1884 - 668 pages
...every degree and variety of culture." Even Herbert Spencer is constrained to acknowledge: "Everywhere we find, expressed or implied, the belief that each...capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends." Lubbock, Tylor, and the best of that school, have attempted to break the force of this fact by attributing... | |
| Robert Hunter - 1884 - 400 pages
...of guardian-spirits had Its origin In a low form of Animism— that each per* mlsdoublc.that when be dies his other self, whether remaining near at hand or gone far away, may return, and continue capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends. It finds expression in some form in... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1835 - 32 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere we find expressed or implied the belief that each...capable of injuring his enemies and aiding his friends.* * A critical reader may raise an objection. If animal-worship is to be rationally interpreted, how... | |
| James Palatine Dameron - 1885 - 124 pages
...characters, not the kind of deities to make and govern worlds." " Everywhere," says Herbert Spencer, "we find expressed or implied the belief that each person is double; that when he dies his other self, whether remaining near at hand or gone far away, may return and continue... | |
| 1887 - 504 pages
...Spencer on the " Origin of Animal Worship." He believes that it originated in the following ways : 1. In the belief that each person is double, and that when he dies, his other self continues capable of injuring his enemies and of aiding his friends. 2. In the common practice of savages... | |
| Herbert Spencer - 1891 - 514 pages
...existing, and that his feelings and ideas concerning it form the basis of his superstitions. Everywhere we find expressed or implied the belief that each...injuring his enemies and aiding his friends.* But how out of the desire to propitiate this second per* A critical reader may raise an objection. If animal-worship... | |
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