The Religious Sentiment

audiobook

The Religious Sentiment

by Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison) Brinton

EN·~6 hours

Chapters

Description

The author turns a scholarly eye toward the deepest human impulse to worship, asking what in the mind first gave rise to the idea of gods. Beginning with the relatively uncomplicated belief systems of America’s native peoples, he uses them as a laboratory for an inductive study that later expands to the historic religions of the Old World. By treating religious feeling as a natural phenomenon, he seeks to place it within the same scientific framework applied to other aspects of the mind.

Throughout the work, sensation, emotion and the pursuit of pleasure are presented as the primary forces that shape religious thought, while intellect provides the culminating point of mental development. The treatise outlines a set of “laws of thought” that govern how ideas associate, reason, and ultimately seek truth. In doing so, it tackles enduring questions—why humans imagine deities, what sustains worship, and whether prayer or reason holds the greater sway—offering a measured, interdisciplinary perspective on the enduring mystery of faith.

Details

Full title

The Religious Sentiment Its Source and Aim: A Contribution to the Science and Philosophy of Religion

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (356K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Julia Miller and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2009-09-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison) Brinton

Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison) Brinton

1837–1899

A pioneering American archaeologist, ethnologist, and linguist, he helped bring the study of Indigenous American languages and cultures into the academic mainstream. Trained as a physician, he wrote widely for both scholars and general readers and became a major voice in nineteenth-century anthropology.

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