id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 11015 Picton, J. Allanson (James Allanson) Pantheism, Its Story and Significance Religions Ancient and Modern .txt text/plain 17795 934 64 God to be All in All, it does not follow that Pantheism must hold a man, [Sidenote: Pantheism as a Religion almost Entirely Modern.] common thought, an ultimate and eternal Being which included gods as [Sidenote: A World Drama or Process is a Human, not a Divine Aspect of [Sidenote: Suggestive of Pantheism, but not such in Spinoza's Sense.] Modern Pantheism as a religion begins with Spinoza. [Sidenote: Changes In Theories of Matter since Spinoza's time.] soul a finite Mode of God's infinite attribute of thought, while both indicating his idea of God. In his view, then, man is a finite mode of sense in which each man, being an eternal thought of God, has an aspect like God, could contemplate the infinite Universe all at once, and have that the human mind is part of the infinite intellect (thought) of God; [Sidenote: Why Pantheism as a Religion was called Modern.] ./cache/11015.txt ./txt/11015.txt