OR A PHILOSOPHICAL INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLES OF RELIGION. BY THE REV. HENRY TRURO BRAY, M. A., B. D., LL. D., ST. LOUIS: Entered According to Act of Congress, in the year 1888, by HENRY TRURO BRAY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. BL B65 1888 CONTENTS: BOOK FIRST. c: Christianity compared with Other Religions. (a): Its Exclusive Claim not admitted. D: The General Evolution of the Conception of God. a: All Religions express an Eternal Truth. b: All Religions the Work of Evolution. c: All Religions Good for the Time and Place. The Continuation of Life after Death, in No Case satisfactorily and conclusively proved. (b): It is Possible that the Individual Mind is but a Mode of Action of the Uni- versal and Infinite Mind. B: Some Reasons in Proof of the Immortality of the Soul. c: The Presumption that Mind is not a Mere Mode nor Result of Material Action. d: The Fact of Religion and Human Confidence in It. (b): Hard to believe that What is Natural and apparently Necessary to True Develop- ment, can be False. |