←
The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature
Index.
Absolute, oneness with the, 419.
Abstractness of religious objects, 53.
Achilles, 86.
Ackermann, Madame,
63.
Æsthetic elements in religions, 460.
Alcohol, 387.
Al-Ghazzali, 402.
Ali, 341.
Alleine, 228.
Alternations of personality, 193.
Alvarez de Paz, 116.
Amiel, 394.
Anæsthesia, 288.
Anæsthetic revelation, 387-393.
Angelus Silesius,
417.
“Anhedonia,” 145.
Aristocratic type, 371.
Aristotle, 495.
Ars, le Curé d', 302.
Atman, 400.
Aurelius, see Marcus.
Bashkirtseff, 83.
Beecher, 256.
Behmen, see Boehme.
Belief, due to non-rationalistic impulses, 73.
Bhagavad-Gita, 361.
Blavatsky, Madam,
421.
Blood, 389.
Blumhardt, 113.
Booth, 203.
Bougaud, 344.
Bourget, 263.
Bourignon, 321.
Bowne, 502.
Brooks, 512.
Brownell, 515.
Bucke, 398.
Buddhist mysticism, 401.
Bullen, 287.
Butterworth, 411.
Caird, Edward, 106.
Caird, J., on feeling in
religion, 434;
on absolute self, 450;
he does not prove, but reaffirms, religion's dicta, 453.
Call, 289.
Carpenter, 319.
Catharine, Saint, of Genoa, 289.
Cause, 502.
Cennick, 301.
Cerebration, unconscious, 207.
Chance, 526.
Chapman, 324.
Chastity, 310.
Chiefs of tribes, 371.
Christian Science, 106.
Clark, 389.
Clissold, 481.
Coe, 240.
Conduct, perfect, 355.
Confession, 462.
Consistency, 296.
Conversion, to avarice, 178.
Conversion, Fletcher's, 181;
Tolstoy's, 184;
Bunyan's, 186;
Bradley's, 189;
compared with natural moral growth, 199;
Hadley's, 201;
two types of, 205 ff.;
Brainerd's, 212;
Alline's, 217;
Oxford graduate's, 221;
Ratisbonne's, 223;
instantaneous, 227;
is it a natural phenomenon? 230;
fruits of, 237;
its momentousness, 239;
may be supernatural, 242;
its concomitants:
sense of higher control, 244,
happiness, 248,
automatisms, 250,
luminous phenomena, 251;
its degree of permanence, 256.
Cosmic consciousness, 398.
Counter-conversion, 176.