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

...very great believer in athletics because I believe that although intellect is a good thing, the University should do more than develop that alone. Force, strength of will and character are things that can not be neglected in a well-organized body. A man to be sure must not be known merely as having been a good athlete while in college. He must do something afterwards. And while I appreciate to the full what a well trained mind means, I am bound to say that the longer I live I come to believe that intellect comes second to the powers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A GOOD BEGINNING. | 1/27/1898 | See Source »

This lecture dealt with the "General Nature of the Intellect," the second will deal with "The Basis of Our Social Consciousness-the Ego and the Alter," the third and fourth with "The Beginnings of Social Life in the Individual," the fifth with the "Theory of the Origin of the Ideas of Ego and Alter," the sixth with the "Social Basis of the Thinking Process," the seventh with the "Social Basis of the Reasoning Process," the eighth with the "Social Basis of Conscience," and the ninth with the "Social Basis of Our View of Nature," and the tenth lecture will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Lectures. | 1/18/1898 | See Source »

...told that Whitman's apparent vanity is broad-minded candor; that his crudeness of form is a positive virtue; for thereby he expresses with greater freedom the great acts and underlying principles of daily life. Whitman, says Burroughs, is superior to Emerson, in that the latter's intellect starves out his sympathies and emotions. Again, Whitman rises above the sphere of literary culture and conventional form which confines Tennyson and Browning. He belongs rather with Homer, Job, and Isaiah, for his poetry is more than literature; it is humanity itself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Book Notice. | 12/7/1896 | See Source »

...there is such a thing as truth. There are two dogmas-absolutism and empiricism. The absolutists say that we can know when we know truth; the empiricists believe that we cannot know when we have grasped the truth. If a thing admits of no doubt it is because the intellect is illumined beyond question. We all feel that of some things we are certain. To this extent we are absolutists. Since we are absolutists by nature, we should believe the empiricist theory, and go on this basis. For nothing has ever been accepted as certain until it has been denied...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE WILL TO BELIEVE. | 4/16/1896 | See Source »

...moal questions we must consult not only our reason but our hearts. In such cases it would be absurd to bar out our wills. The simple question of the existence of moral truth cannot be answered by pure intellect. Moral skepticism can no more be refuted by logic than can intellectual skepticism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE WILL TO BELIEVE. | 4/16/1896 | See Source »

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