History of Modern Philosophy - From Nicolas of Cusa to the Present Time by Richard Falckenberg
page 108 of 811 (13%)
page 108 of 811 (13%)
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This natural instinct is both an impulse toward truth and a capacity for
good or impulse to self-preservation. The latter extends not only to the individual but to all things with which the individual is connected, to the species, nay, to all the rest of the world, and its final goal is eternal happiness: all natural capacities are directed toward the highest good or toward God. The sense for the divine may indeed be lulled to sleep or led astray by our free will, but not eradicated. To be rational and to be religious are inseparable; it is religion that distinguishes man from the brute, and no people can be found in which it is lacking. If atheists really exist, they are to be classed with the irrational and the insane. The content of natural religion may be summed up in the following five articles, which all nations confess: 1. That there is a Supreme Being (_numen supremum_). 2. That he ought to be worshiped. 3. That virtue and piety are the chief elements of worship. 4. That man ought to repent of his sins. 5. That there are rewards and punishments in a future life. Besides these general principles, on the discovery of which Lord Herbert greatly prides himself, the positive religions contain arbitrary additions, which distinguish them from one another and which owe their origin, for the most part, to priestly deception, although the rhapsodies of the poets and the inventions of the philosophers have contributed their share. The essential principles of natural religion (God, virtue, faith, hope, love, and repentance) come more clearly to light in Christianity than in the religions of heathendom, where they are overgrown with myths and ceremonies. The _Religio Medici_ (1642) of Sir Thomas Browne shows similar tendencies. %9. Preliminary Survey.% |
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