About This Book
A philosophical inquiry examines human attempts to know the divine, contrasting pantheism and orthodox theism and arguing that conventional accounts leave God empirically inaccessible. Using ideas from evolution and physiology, the author proposes a unified view in which life and divinity intertwine: organisms and their constituent cells form a compound personality that expresses a single animating spirit. Botanical and zoological metaphors—trees, coral, and cellular life—illustrate continuity between individual and cosmic life. Later chapters consider the likeness of God, the prospect of everlasting life, and the distinction between a partially apprehensible presence and a ultimately unknowable aspect of the divine.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks
A First Year in Canterbury Settlement
by Samuel Butler
Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino
by Samuel Butler
Atlas of ancient & classical geography
by Samuel Butler
Cambridge Pieces
by Samuel Butler
Canterbury Pieces
by Samuel Butler
Erewhon Revisited Twenty Years Later, Both by the Original Discoverer of the Country and by His Son
by Samuel Butler
You May Also Like
6 picks
"About My Father's Business": Work Amidst the Sick, the Sad, and the Sorrowing
by Thomas Archer
"Beautiful Thoughts"
by Henry Drummond
"Bethink Yourselves!"
by graf Leo Tolstoy
"How Can I Help to Abolish Slavery?" or, Counsels to the Newly Converted
by Maria Weston Chapman
"I Believe" and other essays
by Guy Thorne
"Imperialism" and "The Tracks of Our Forefathers"
by Charles Francis Adams