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" Existence, the Infinite and Eternal Energy, from which all things proceed, the Creative Power, 'the Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained. "
The Popular Science Monthly - Page 432
1884
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Littell's Living Age, 210. köide

1896 - 926 lehte
...essays is not wholly unlike that which leads Herbert Spencer to his idea of the Unknowable — "the Infinite and Eternal Energy by which all things are created and sustained." But Symonds's own belief tended rather more to a definite and moral activity of the Energy he could...
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Nineteenth Century and After, 16. köide

1884 - 1086 lehte
...originally written, the expression. ran — 'an Infinite and Eternal Energy by which all things are created1 and sustained ; ' and that in the proof I struck out...them might mislead, and there might result such an inshmation as that which Mr. Harrison makes. The substituted expression, which embodies my thought...
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The Nineteenth Century, 16. köide

1884 - 1142 lehte
...only on the Known and the Knowable.' \Ve see the result. Mr. Spencer has developed his Unknowable into an ' Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained.' He has discovered it to be the Ultimate Cause, the AllBeing, the Creative Power, and all the other...
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The Nature and Reality of Religion: A Controversy Between Frederic Harrison ...

Frederic Harrison - 1885 - 254 lehte
...only on the Known and the Knowable." "We see the result. Mr. Spencer has developed his Unknowable into an " Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained." He has discovered it to be the Ultimate Cause, the All-Being, the Creative Power, and all the other...
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The Insuppressible Book: A Controversy Between Herbert Spencer and Frederic ...

Gail Hamilton, Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 296 lehte
...natural, metaphysical, theological ; and they will surely say that to their ordinary comprehension an Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained, everywhere present, is an infinitely more natural and possible object of worship than an intangible...
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Civilization & Progress: Being the Outlines of a New System of Political ...

John Beattie Crozier - 1885 - 468 lehte
...'persistence of force,' when used to denote that of which the visible material world is the effect, as ' an Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained ;' whereas he had already defined it to be the truth that the quantity of force in the Universe remains...
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The sceptic's creed: a review

Nevison Loraine - 1885 - 188 lehte
...describe it as' "the All-Being," "the Ultimate Reality," "the Sole Existence "; and yet even further as " an infinite and eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained." ] Here surely the chief priest of the Unknowable himself leads us within the felt shadow, into the...
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The Insuppressible Book: A Controversy Between Herbert Spencer and Frederic ...

Gail Hamilton, Herbert Spencer - 1885 - 300 lehte
...Existence, the Infinite and Eternal Energy, from which all things proceed, the Creative Power, 'the Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained.' It is 'to stand in substantially the same relation towards our general conception of things as does...
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Religion Without God and God Without Religion, 1–2. köide

William Arthur - 1885 - 576 lehte
...Existence, the Infinite and Eternal Energy from which all things proceed, the Creative Power, 1 the Infinite and Eternal Energy, by which all things are created and sustained.' It is 1 to stand in substantially the same relation towards our general conception of things as does...
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The Unitarian Review and Religious Magazine, 22. köide

Charles Lowe, Henry Wilder Foote, John Hopkins Morison, Henry H. Barber, James De Normandie - 1884 - 592 lehte
...connects this with the Athanasian creed. Mr. Spencer, so far from qualifying his expression, says that " perhaps Mr. Harrison will be surprised to learn that,...meant, the ideas associated with them might mislead." This brief defence by Mr. Spencer of his own philosophical attitude toward religious belief, in which...
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