Divine Imagining An Essay On the First Principles of Philosophy Being a Contin

Cover Divine Imagining An Essay On the First Principles of Philosophy Being a Contin
Divine Imagining An Essay On the First Principles of Philosophy Being a Contin
Fawcett, E. Douglas (Edward Douglas), 1866-1960
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In sober truth, the whole practice of treating the Ground as a sort of chill logical, or other grey sort of, limbo, belongs to superstition. And, in the case of a writer who regards the Ground as alike conscious and imaginal, the superstition no longer lends itself to any defence " {World as Imagination, p. 148-9).
102 DIVINE IMAGINING chap.
such as no concepts, used in human thinking, can express. And what of beauty which has that immediacy that attests itself ? In seeking beauty, as Mackenzie
... submits, we seek what, in a sense, is " the highest end of all " ; even truth fails to satisfy " until we can see that it has beauty. " The mere thinker, shall we say, finds no rest short of expansion into the very plenitude of the Divine Life : a plenitude which includes somehow this feature of beauty. Stirred no doubt by this same impulse, Ravaisson has told us that the world is the work of an absolute beauty, " qui n'est la cause des choses que par I'amour qu'elle met en elles. " But here, of course, in accenting an aspect too often overlooked, he outruns the truth.

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