Ten Great Religions: A comparison of all religions. 2d edHoughton, Mifflin, 1888 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 85
Página vi
... says Brinton , " at least among thinking men , when the religious legends of the lower races were looked upon as trivial fables , or as the in- ventions of the Father of Lies . They are neither the one nor the other . They express , in ...
... says Brinton , " at least among thinking men , when the religious legends of the lower races were looked upon as trivial fables , or as the in- ventions of the Father of Lies . They are neither the one nor the other . They express , in ...
Página viii
... says it was ; Lenormant and others tell us , that though on his way to this conception , he did not reach it . Was Buddhism a reaction against Brahmanism , as most writers suppose ? Or was it a development of Brahmanism , as Oldenberg ...
... says it was ; Lenormant and others tell us , that though on his way to this conception , he did not reach it . Was Buddhism a reaction against Brahmanism , as most writers suppose ? Or was it a development of Brahmanism , as Oldenberg ...
Página xi
... says that Prof. Seydel divides the parallels between Buddhism and Chris- tianity into three classes . The first class contains those which are purely accidental . The second class consists of those which show some dependence of one of ...
... says that Prof. Seydel divides the parallels between Buddhism and Chris- tianity into three classes . The first class contains those which are purely accidental . The second class consists of those which show some dependence of one of ...
Página xii
... says that Buddha fasted seven days , and then went to the fig tree . Later traditions make it twenty - eight days . Now as fasting was a religious act in all systems , there is no necessity of supposing one of them to have been borrowed ...
... says that Buddha fasted seven days , and then went to the fig tree . Later traditions make it twenty - eight days . Now as fasting was a religious act in all systems , there is no necessity of supposing one of them to have been borrowed ...
Página xiii
... says , " I cannot see any reason why we should not treat the verses of the Dhammapada , if not as the utterances of Buddha , at least as what were believed by the members of the council under Asoka , 242 B. C. , to have been the ...
... says , " I cannot see any reason why we should not treat the verses of the Dhammapada , if not as the utterances of Buddha , at least as what were believed by the members of the council under Asoka , 242 B. C. , to have been the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Ahriman ancient ancient Egypt animals beauty beginning belief belong body Brahmanism Buddha Buddhism Bushmen called Catholic cause chaos character childlike races Christ Christianity church conception Confucius creation Creator darkness death declares Deity Ditheism divine doctrine earth Egypt Egyptian eternal ethnic religions Euthydemus evil existence fact faith Father gilt top gods Greece Greek heart heaven Hindu holy idea idolatry immortality India infinite inspiration intelligence Jesus Judaism Koran Laws of Manu ligion living lowest mankind mind Mohammed Mohammedanism Monotheism moral Moses nations nature origin Ormazd Osiris outward Pantheism perfect Persia philosophers Plato Polytheism prayer priests primitive prophets religious Rig-Veda ritual Roman Rome sacred books says speak spirit supernatural Supreme teaching temples tendency Testament thee theism theory things thou thought thousand tion transmigration triad tribes truth unity universe vast Vedas Vedic hymns whole worship Zoroaster