Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2
Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2
Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress)
The book Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2 was written by author Harry Houdini Collection (Library of Congress) Here you can read free online of Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2 a good or bad book?
What reading level is Mind : Science, Philosophy, Religion, Psychology, Metaphysics, Occultism 2 book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
— Ooethe. Digitized by Google EMERSON^S INFLUENCE ON MODERN THOUGHT. BY JULIA HIRSHORN. "Know thyself; trust thyself." This is the keynote of all of Emerson's writings. As a skilled musician takes a theme or motif and elaborates it, bringing forth a variety of melody and sound, but always keeping the original idea in mind, so Emerson took this tho^ught as his fundamental principle and built upon it a monument of pure and noble sentiment that remains as a blessed remembrance of the great seer an...d an invaluable gift to posterity. His own words, "he builded better than he knew," are applicable to himself; and he had the satisfaction, during the latter part of his life, to see the tenor of general thought rise in a marked manner. "The exaltation of national character produced by the civil war," says Morley, "opened new and wider acceptance for a great moral and spiritual teacher; and from the close of the war until his death, Emerson's ascendency within his own sphere of action was complete and the public recognition of him universal." "Know thyself;" be true to that which is best and high- est according to your inner conception; listen to the guiding voice of conscience and analyze the real motive — ^these are some of the great lessons Emerson teaches.
User Reviews: