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Word: minds (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

Yale will consult the best sporting authority on the subject and appeal to the popular mind as to whether she is entitled to 105 points and the match instead of 104 points and defeat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Intercollegiate Shooting Match. | 5/22/1892 | See Source »

...religion, Christ is a door, through which Divinity comes to Humanity, just as the artist, the thinker, are door between the realms of beauty, and truth, and men. Through Christ God reveals himself to men. There is an innate passion in the human mind for expansion and one of the forms which this passion takes is a search for God. It is to this searching that the words come "I am the door...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 5/22/1892 | See Source »

Religion presents perplexities and must present them as long as it lives. The thinking man can never become perfectly settled in his mind on questions of the interpretation of Scripture, of creed and form. Yet through all these perplexities, which are, after all, side issues, certain fundamental truths stand out in perfect clearness, unobscured by personal feeling. The beautiful relation of Christ to men is one of these truths. The preacher ended with an earnest plea for breadth of view in the great truths and principles which effect all sects and creeds alike...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Appleton Chapel. | 5/22/1892 | See Source »

...Nunstrberg's theory of mind defensible? [See Philosophical Review for March...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English C. | 5/16/1892 | See Source »

...literature in the form of a criticism, the aim being to show that the early poets were the ancestors of the romanticists. In the course of the next ten years he published three volumes of poetry. Though the verses were well written and often of a religious turn of mind they did not meet with the success he had anticipated. He realized that he was intended more for a critic. As a novelist he was not fortunate, for his one novel, published in 1834, was not successful. He devoted considerable time to the study of Chataubrian and gave a remarkable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Black's Lecture. | 5/5/1892 | See Source »

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