R, Plato on the letter, 375. Rajendralal Mitra, 100 note. Rajmahals, dialect of the, 336. Râmâyana, 235, 541. Raymundus de Sabunde, 52. worded and unworded, 352. Red Indians, and the Supreme - religion of the, 216, 344. Religatio, 35. Religens, religiosus, 35. Religio, religare, relegere, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38. Romana, 40. Religio, 38, 39, 40, 42. etymological definition of, 33-36. Religio, historical definition of, 36- | Religion, definition of, by D.Thomp- 41, 43, 44. dogmatic definitions of, 37, 43. - later meanings of, 41-43. Religion, stationary, 7. changes in, 8. retrogression in, 8. essential elements of, 8. definition of, why wanted, 27. and superstition, 38. - in Old and New Testament, 41, 42. random definitions of, 43. as sentiment or knowledge, 64. aesthetic and moral feelings in, 64. as dependence, 68. as freedom, 69. as knowledge, 69. - Gruppe's three causes of the - Phoenicia or India the birth- the discovery of one man, and he Gruppe's theory, 78, 79, 80. definition of, by Strauss, 81 note. - son, 81 note. of savages, 85, 86, 189. names for, 90. no word for, in Sanskrit, 92. began with simple perceptions, - Physical, Anthropological, and natural phenomena explained by, author's definition of, 188, 193. a psychological necessity, 194. theorist's view of the science of, 212. lives in hearts, not in books, 215. traces of, everywhere, 221, 222. and mythology must be studied Science of, founded on the Science Religion, French, 41. Religions, natural and revealed, 51. - without books, 215. value of the study of, 222, 223. gress, 9. - human element in, 9. possibility of, 233. what has been unfolded, 236. Rhys, Professor, 151 note, 225 note, Rig-veda, M. M.'s edition of, 19, 20. age of the, 184, 244. not sacrificial, 185. Rishi, the, a seer, not a maker, 229. Rivers, 152. Road, what we ride on, 368. are ultimate facts, 210. in English, number of, 365. of language express the common express our acts, 386. geographical distribution of, 450. Roskoff, 255, 267 note. on the religion of savages, 85, derivation of Vesta, 450. Rousseau on language, 237 note. Rückert, 17. his Dravidian lectures, 325 note. other names for, 490. Siva a development of, 491. Rúna, Gothic, 413, 413 note. of, 19. Samâsa (Siaσkevý) identified with Samoans and Sarawakians believe that men can become trees, 441. Sandilya, 99 note, 100, 101 note. Sanskrit, no word for religion in, 92. of the Vedic Hymns, 284, 296, of the Brahmanas, 296. of the Sûtras, 296, 297. of Pânini, 297, 299. Brahmanic, 299. Buddhist, 299. mixed, 299. plays, 300. literature, 300. - renaissance of, 300. Santa Theresa, 233. Santhals, dialect of the, 336. Saramâ and Helena, 464. son of Saramâ, 482. Savage races, do not carry us further Savages, 133, 212. without words for finite and in- — nineteenth century, as antedilu- two sorts of, 200. and barbarians unknown to the Savigny, 268. Saxon, 203, 286. Science of Religion, chairs for the - study of the, II, 12. a natural science, 12, 13. Scots Magazine, objections in, 196 Scythian family, 325. Seeing, what it is, 117. Selection requires one who selects, Self, the, 160, 164, 576. Selfishness, the source of religion, 74. three branches of the, 304. religions, 214. language of Carthage, 340. Bel or Baal, 455. Seneca, 56. |