412
INDEX
Mystic states, their effects, 21–22, 321
Mystical experiences, 56
Mystical region of experience, 398
Mysticism, Lectures XVI and XVII,
passim, xlv, xlvi, xlviii; its marks,
295; its theoretic results, 322, 327,
331–332; it cannot warrant truth,
327; its results, 329; its relation to
the sense of union, 393
Natural theology, 380
Naturalism, 113, 114, 132
Nature, scientific view of, 379–380
Near-Death Experience, li
Negative accounts of deity, 323
N
ELSON
, 165, 328
N
ETTLETON
, 169
Neuroscience, xlvi, xlvii, xlviii, xlix, l,
li, lii, liii, liv, lvi, lviii, lix, lxi, lxii,
lxiii
N
EWBERG
, lii
N
EWMAN
, F. W., 68
N
EWMAN
, J. H., on dogmatic theology,
336, 337, 342; his type of
imagination, 355
N
IEBUHR
, lx
N
IETZSCHE
, xlii–xliii, 288, 289
Nitrous oxide, its mystical effects, 300
No-function, 204–206, 233, 300, 322
Non-resistance, 220, 276, 277, 279, 292
N
ORAGER
, xlvi
Obedience, 242, 246
O
BERMANN
, 368
O’C
ONNELL
, 176
O’C
ONNOR
, xliii–xliv
Omit, 231
Once-born type, 68, 69, 132, 282, 377
Oneness with God, see Union
Optimism, 88, 91, 70, 73, 79, 91, 281;
systematic, 74; and evolutionism,
76; it may be shallow, 283
Orderliness of world, 339
Organism determines all mental states
whatsoever, 16–17
Origin of mental state no criterion of
their value, 16 ff.
Orison, 314, 315, 316, 318, 321
Over-beliefs, lx, 389, 396, 397, 400;
the author’s, 397
Over-soul, 398
Oxford, graduate of, 173–174, 176,
186, 194, 210
Pagan feeling, 72–73
Pantheism, 106
P
ARKER
, 68, 69
P
ARSONS
, xliv
P
ASCAL
, 223, 224
P
ATON
, 279
P
AUL
, S
AINT
, l, 16, 136, 292, 278,
P
EEK
, 198
P
EIRCE
, B., xxi
P
EIRCE
, C., xxi, 343, 344
Penny, 251–252
P
ERREYVE
, 390
Persecutions, 264, 267
P
ERSINGER
, lv ff.
Personal inventories, xlix, lix–lxii
Personality, explained away by
science, 97, 379–380;
heterogeneous, 134; alterations of,
153, 166 ff.; is reality, 385; see
Character
P
ETER
, S
AINT
,
OF
A
LCANTARA
, 280
Phenomenology, xxxiii
P
HILO
, 371
Philosophy, Lecture XVIII, passim;
must coerce assent, 335; scholastic,
340–342, 346; idealistic, 338, 347;
unable to give a theoretic warrant
to faith, 351; its true office in
religion, 351
Photisms, 197
Piety, 264 ff.
Pike County, xxvi
P
INKER
, lxii–lxiii
Pluralism, 106
Polytheism, 106, 114, 405
Poverty, 235, 242, 246–247, 252, 280,
285–286
pragmaticism, xxv
“Pragmatism,” xvii, xviii, xxiii, xxiv,
xxv, xxviii, xxxii, xxxv, xxxix,
343–344, 400, 401–404
Prayer, 357–358; its definition,
358–359; its essence, 359; petitional,
361; its effects, 366–369, 403
“Presence”, sense of, 50–54, 56–61,
212–213, 215 ff., 307, 324
INDEX
413
Presence of God, the practice of, 94
Primitive human thought, 382
Principles of Psychology, xxx, xxxvi
P
RINGLE
-P
ATTISON
, 351
Prophets, the Hebrew, 370
Protestant theology, 171, 191
Protestantism and Catholicism, 68,
93, 178–179, 257–258, 355–356
Providential leading, 365
Psychology: Briefer course, xxx
Psychology, methods of, xl–xliii, xliv,
xlvii, xlviii, xlix, l, li, lii, liii, lvi,
lviii, lix, lx, lxii
Psychology of religion, as a discipline,
xl–xlvi, xlvii, xlviii, li, lii, liii, lxi,
lxii, lxiii
Psychopathy and religion, 22 ff.
P
UFFER
, 305
Purity, 214, 226–228, 231–232, 235,
265, 271–273, 276, 287
Quakers, 11, 166, 228, 230, 264
Quietism, 105
Race, xlvi
R
AMKRISHNA
, 281, 282
R
ANKIN
, xxxiv
R
ATIBONNE
, 176, 185, 201
Rationalism, xvi, 61–62; its authority
over-thrown by mysticism, 328
Rationality, xvii, xxiv, xxvii
R
ÈCÈJAC
, 315, 393
“Recollection”, 94, 95, 226
Redemption, 125
R
EED
, S
AMPSON
, xvi
Reformation of character, 250
Regeneration, see Conversion; by
relaxation, 90–91
R
EID
, 345
Relaxation, salvation by, 90; see
Surrender
Religion, to be tested by fruits, not
by origin, 14 ff., 259; its definition,
26, 29–30; is solemn, 34; compared
with Stoicism, 37; its unique
function, 45; abstractness of its
objects, 47; differs according to
temperament, 63, 109, 260; and
ought to differ, 376; considered to
be a “survival,” 96; its relations to
melancholy, 116; worldly passions
may combine with it, 263; its
essential characters, 287–375; its
relation to prayer, 358–360; asserts
a fact, not a theory, 378; its truth,
293; more than science, it holds by
concrete reality, 386; attempts to
evaporate it into philosophy, 388;
it is concerned with personal
destinies, 379, 388; with feeling and
conduct, 389; is a sthenic affection,
390; is for life, not for knowledge,
391; its essential contents, 392; it
postulates issues of fact, 399
Religion, study and methodology of,
xli, xliv, xlvii, lii, lvi; the category
of, xliii; see “Science of Religions”
Religious emotion, 27, 218
Religious language, see Language
Religious leaders, often nervously
unstable, 11 ff., 29; their loneliness,
262
“Religious sentiment”, 27
R
ENAN
, 33, 34
R
ENOUVIER
, xxii
Renunciations, 255, 272
Repentance, 103, 104, 105, 111
Resignation, 213, 217, 222, 223, 224,
237
Revelation, the anaesthetic, 300–301
Revelations, see Automatisms
Revelations in Mormon Church, 373
Revivalism, 179
R
IBET
, 314
R
IBOT
, xliii, 116, 117, 388
R
ODRIGUEZ
, 237, 244, 245, 246, 247
R
OSENZWEIG
, xviii
R
OYCE
, xxvii, 351
R
UTHERFORD
, M
ARK
, 64
S
ABTIER
, A., 359
Sacrifice, 214, 220, 227, 232, 234,
235, 236, 243, 250, 253
S
AINT
-P
IERRE
, 67, 70
S
AINTE
-B
EUVE
, 203, 245
Saintliness, Sainte-Beuve on, 203; its
characteristics, 272–274, 287;
criticism of, 255 ff.
Saintly conduct, 277–293
Saints, dislike of natural man for, 288
414
INDEX
Salpetriere, xxvii
Salvation, 406
S
ANDAY
, 371
S
ATAN
, in picture, 44
Saturday Club, xix
Scholastic arguments for God, 338
Science, ignores personality and
teleology, 379–380; her “facts”, 381,
382
Science, status of, lvi, lxiii, lix, lx,
lxii
“Science of Religions”, 335, 352, 353,
378–379, 394, 396; see Religion,
study and methodology of
Scientific conceptions, their late
adoption, 383
Scientific discourse, xliii–xliv, liv, lvi
Second-birth, 125, 130, 131, 132
S
EELEY
, 64
Self of the world, 449
Self-despair, 90, 104, 118, 124, 130,
164, 167, 169, 179
Self-surrender, 90, 98, 163, 164, 165,
166, 167, 169, 170, 175, 179
S
ÉNANCOUR
, 368
S
ETH
, 351
Sexual temptation, 210
Sexuality as cause of religion, 14, 15
“Shrew”, 270, 271
Sick sols, Lectures V and VI, passim
Sickness, 82, 84, 92
S
IGHELE
, 206
Sin, 165, 167, 169, 170
Sinners, Christ died for, 104
Skepticism, 256, 259 ff.
S
KOBELEFF
, 208
S
MITH
, J
OSEPH
, 370, 372
Softening of the heart, 209
Solemnity, 34, 35, 43
Soul, 151, 152, 154, 160, 161, 165,
167, 168, 169, 170, 203, 204, 213,
214–217, 224, 226, 227, 231, 233,
234, 238, 239, 248, 251, 252
Soul, strength of, 214
S
PENCER
, 277, 291
S
PINOZA
, 13, 103
Spiritism, 397
Spirit-return, 404
Spiritual judgements, 9, 10, 17, 18, 19
Spiritual states, tests of their value, 19
S
TARBUCK
, xliii, xliv, xlvi, lxi, 5, 56,
58, 60, 69, 70, 76, 140, 157, 158,
161, 162, 163, 164, 165–166, 169,
188, 195, 197, 198, 201, 202, 210,
211, 219, 234, 252, 275, 305
S
TEVENSON
, 111, 231
Stoicism, 38–40, 115–116
Strange appearance of the world, 121
Strength of soul, 214
Subconscious action in conversion,
156, 164, 165, 166, 167, 169, 185,
190
Subconscious life, 93, 157, 163, 165,
183, 185, 211, 373
Subconscious Self, as intermediary
between the Self and God,
394–395
Subliminal, see Subconscious
Sufis, 311–314, 324
Suggestion, 91, 92, 101
Suicide, 118, 119, 124
Supernatural world, 399–400
Supernaturalism its two kinds, 401;
criticism of universalistic, 402
Surrender, salvation by, 90, 164, 166,
167
Survival-theory of religion, 379, 385,
386
S
USO
, 239, 240, 241–242, 272, 280
Swedenborg, xvi, xvii, xviii, xx, xxii,
xxiv, xxvi, xxvii, xxxix, xl
Swedenborgian, xvi, xvii, xx, xxiv,
xxv, xxvii, xxxiv, xxxv, xxxix
S
WINBURNE
, 326
S
YMONDS
, 298, 299, 302, 304
Sympathetic magic, 383, 384
Sympathy, see Charity
Systems, philosophic, 433–434
Taine, 13, 14
T
AYLOR
, 193
Temporal lobes, li–lii, lv–lvii
Tenderness, see Charity
T
ENNYSON
, 297, 302
T
ERESA
, S
AINT
, 16, 19, 20, 21, 204,
209, 266, 270, 280, 316, 318, 319,
321
Thayer expedition, xxii
The Hidden Self, xxxi
The moral equivalent of war, xvi
INDEX
415
Theologia Germanica, 39
Theologians, systematic, 345
Theology, xlii, lviii
“Theopathy”, 267, 269, 271, 287
T
HOREAU
, 215
Threshold, 109
Tiger, 164, 205
Tobacco, 211, 227
T
OLSTOY
, 119, 120, 121, 122, 124,
125, 127, 141, 145, 146, 147, 148,
161, 173, 193, 328, 390
T
OWIANSKI
, 219, 220
Town and Country Club, xix
Tragedy of life, 282
Tranquillity, 222–223, 239
Transcendentalism criticised,
402–403
Transcendentalist, xv, xvii, xxvii,
xxxv
Transcendentalists, 398
T
REVOR
, 307
T
RINE
, 83, 94, 305
Truth of religion, how to be tested,
292; what it is, 393; mystical
perception, 295, 317
“Twice-born” type, 68, 115, 116, 132,
133, 282, 327, 377
tychism, xvii
T
YNDALL
, 234
“Unconscious celebration”, 163, 167
Unification of Self, 139, 145, 272
“U
NION
M
ORALE
”, 213
Union with God, 310, 315, 316, 317,
319, 329, 331, 332, 348–349, 376,
377, 393 ff.; see Lectures on
Conversion, passim
Unity of universe, 106
University of California, xxvii
Unreality, sense of, 54
Unseen realities, Lecture III, passim
Upanishads, 322, 325
U
PHAM
, 216, 224, 226
US Coastal Survey, xxvi
Use, xvi, xxiv, xxv
Utopias, 280
V
ACHEROT
, 388
Value of spiritual affections, how
tested, 19–20
V
AMBÉRY
, 266
Varieties, xv, xvi, xviii, xxii, xxx,
xxxii, xxxiii, xxxv, xxxvi, xxxviii,
xxxix, xl, xlv, xlvi, xlvii, xlviii, l,
lxii
Vedantism, 310, 325, 329, 396, 398,
403
Veracity, 11, 13, 16, 228 ff.
V
IVEKANADA
, 310, 396
V
OLTAIRE
, 33
V
OYSEY
, 215
War, 267, 279, 284–285, 288
Wealth-worship, 283–284, 285, 286
W
EAVER
, 220, 221
WESLEY, 88, 91, 166, 196, 235, 292,
369, 370, 377; see Methodism
Wesleyan self-despair, 88, 166
W
HITEFIELD
, 248
W
HITMAN
, 70–73, 306, 307, 324, 329,
377, 390
W
ILKINSON
, xviii, xxxix
W
OLFF
, 380, 381
W
OOD
, H
ENRY
, 80, 82, 96
World, soul of the, 347, 351
Worry, 78, 79, 81, 87, 143, 144, 145
W
RIGHT
, xxi
W
ULFF
, xlv–xlvi
W
UNDT
, xxviii, xlii
Yes-function, 204–205, 210, 213, 217,
228, 233, 300, 322
Yoga, 310
Y
OUNG
, 200
Document Outline - Book Cover
- Title
- Contents
- Foreword to the Centenary Edition by Micky James Page
- Editors' preface by Eugene Taylor and Jeremy Carrette
- Introduction by Eugene Taylor: The Spiritual Roots of James's Varieties of Religious Experience
- Introduction by Jeremy Carrette: The Return to James: Psychology, Religion and the Amnesia of Neuroscience
- Preface from the 1902 Edition
- RELIGION AND NEUROLOGY
- CIRCUMSCRIPTION OF THE TOPIC
- THE REALITY OF THE UNSEEN
- THE RELIGION OF HEALTHY-MINDEDNESS
- THE SICK SOUL
- THE DIVIDED SELF, AND THE PROCESS OF ITS UNIfiCATION
- CONVERSION
- CONVERSION;concluded
- SAINTLINESS
- THE VALUE OF SAINTLINESS
- MYSTICISM
- PHILOSOPHY
- OTHER CHARACTERISTICS
- CONCLUSIONS
- POSTSCRIPT
- INDEX
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