Summary
“When I talked with an ardent missionary and pointed out to him that his creed found no support in my experience, he replied. ‘It is not so in your experience, but is so in the other world.’ I answer; ‘Other world! There is no other world. God is one and onmipresent; here or nowhere is the whole fact.’
Emerson.“Ye are complete in Him.”
—Paul.“Whatever amount of power an organism expends in any shape is the correlate and equivalent of a power that was taken into it from without.”
—Herbert Spencer.Students of Biography will observe that in all well-written Lives attention is concentrated for the first few chapters upon two points. We are first introduced to the family to which the subject of memoir belonged. The grandparents, or even the more remote ancestors, are briefly sketched and their chief characteristics brought prominently into view. Then the parents themselves are photographed in detail. Their appearance and physique, their character, their disposition, their mental qualities, are set before us in a critical analysis. And finally we are asked to observe how much the father and the mother respectively have transmitted of their peculiar nature to their offspring. How faithfully the ancestral lines have met in the latest product, how mysteriously the joint characteristics of body and mind have blended, and how unexpected yet how entirely natural a recombination is the result—these points are elaborated with cumulative effect until we realize at last how little we are dealing with an independent unit, how much with a survival and reorganization of what seemed buried in the grave.
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- Natural Law in the Spiritual World , pp. 251 - 284Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1883