56 examples of pantheists in sentences

He told me, hearing me quote Schiller, to beware of the Germans, for they were all Pantheists at heart.

Thus the ninth century saw a rationalist and a pantheist at the court of a Christian king.

He saw the logical and necessary results of every theory which Pantheists, or Rationalists, or Quietists, or Jansenists advanced.

But, when all is said, it is the inward and innate character of man, this god par excellence of the Pantheists, from which they and everything like them proceed.

" It is manifest that the Pantheists give the Sansara the name of God.

Thus, in the same spirit in which Socrates ordered the sacrifice of a cock to Aesculapius for his recovery from the disease of mortal life, philosophical Pantheists, whether Egyptian or Greek, or even Indian, satisfied their religious instincts by hearty communion with the popular worship of traditional gods.

Or, if it is thought that the mediaeval mystics were religious Pantheists, a closer examination of their devout utterances will show that, though they approximated to Pantheism, and even used language such as, if interpreted logically, must have implied it, yet they carefully reserved articles of the ecclesiastical creed, entirely inconsistent with the fundamental position that there is nothing but God.

Another difference between ancient Pantheists and ourselves was the absence in their case of any religious creed, sanctioned by supernatural authority and embodied in a definite form, like that of the three Anglican creeds, or the Westminster Confession of Faith.

For while the aspiration of Hindoo Pantheists was to find and assume the right attitude toward "the glory of the sum of things," the Greeks, as St. Paul long afterward said, "sought after wisdom," and were fascinated by the idea of tracing all the bewildering variety of Nature up to some one "principle" ([Greek: archê]), beginning, origin.

Of this school, arising in the early Christian centuries, some leaders were undoubtedly Pantheists.

The context, however, clearly showed what was meant; for several pages have been occupied with indications of the ideas and teaching of individual Pantheists from Xenophanes to Spinoza.

The idealists and the pantheists make a false use of the tendency toward unity which, no doubt, is present in our reason, when they maintain that true being must be one.

We are not pantheists for all that!"

From thence sprang the spiritual pantheistssuch as Schelling, Fichte, and Hegeland the material pantheists.

In the present age, which is intellectually impotent and remarkable for its veneration of what is bad in every forma condition of things which is quite in keeping with the coined word "Jetztzeit" (present time), as pretentious as it is cacophonicthe pantheists make bold to say that life is, as they call it, "an end-in itself."

The middle ages had, in France, their spiritualists, their materialists, their pantheists, their rationalists, their mystics, and their sceptics, not very clear or refined in their notions, but such as lacked neither profundity in their general view of the questions, nor ingenious subtilty in their argumentative process.

Whether they be pantheists even or sceptics, it is in an atmosphere of Christianity that they live and that their thoughts are developed.

Thus, the theists take their cue from manufacture, the pantheists from growth.

Only thoroughgoing monists or pantheists believe in the absolute.

I said awhile ago that I was envious of Fechner and the other pantheists because I myself wanted the same freedom that I saw them unscrupulously enjoying, of letting mental fields compound themselves and so make the universe more continuous, but that my conscience held me prisoner.

This is that which is wanting in Greek philosophers, English Deists, German Pantheists, and all formalists.

As I have written a rather ample book, called "Theism," expressly designed to establish against Atheists and Pantheists that moral Theism which Christians, Jews, and Mohammedans have in common, and which underlies every attempt of any of the three religions to establish its peculiar and supernatural claims; I have no need of entering on that argument here.

The worshippers of Siva, who were Pantheists in the sense of believing that [S']iva was himself all that exists, as well as the cause of all that is, held that there were eight different manifestations of their god, called Rudras; and that these had their types in the eight visible forms enumerated here.

Nor are any fair representatives of the lower culture in a strict sense pantheists.

You know we are all pantheists of some kind nowadays.

56 examples of  pantheists  in sentences