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By: James Grant

Book cover The Mysteries of All Nations Rise and Progress of Superstition, Laws Against and Trials of Witches, Ancient and Modern Delusions Together With Strange Customs, Fables, and Tales

By: James H. Leuba (1867-1946)

Book cover Study in the Psychology of Religious Phenomena

"The present essay when complete will contain three parts. Of the two parts now published, the first is an analysis of the conversion process; it is divided into six subdivisions, corresponding to the natural phases of the experience: The Sense of Sin, Self-surrender, Faith, Joy, Appearance of newness, The Role of the Will. In Part II we place, side by side, the Christian doctrines concerning Justification, Faith, the Grace of God, the Freedom of the Will, and the corresponding facts as they appear in Part I...

By: James H. Schmitz (1911-1981)

Book cover Ham Sandwich

By: James Hayden Tufts (1862-1942)

Book cover The Ethics of Coöperation

By: James Hinton (1822-1875)

Book cover Mystery of Pain

This book is addressed to the sorrowful, ... to whom their own or others' pain is a daily burden, upon whose hearts it weighs with an intolerable anguish. I seek to speak to these ; not as a teacher, but as a fellow. Sharing their feeling, and knowing well how vain is the attempt to throw off misery, or to persuade ourselves that life is better than it is, I would fain share with them also some thoughts that have seemed to me capable of casting a bright gleam of light athwart the darkness, and, if they are true, of bringing an immense, an incredible joy out of the very bosom of distress. - Summary by James Hinton

By: James Joyce (1882-1941)

Ulysses by James Joyce Ulysses

Banned in the United States and United Kingdom throughout the 1920s, Ulysses turned conventional ideas of the novel inside out with its bold new form, style and theme. Deeply rooted in the Greek myth of the hero of the Trojan War, Joyce bases his novel on Ulysses or Odysseus, who is doomed to voyage for ten years before returning home to Ithaca. Joyce had been deeply influenced by the Iliad and the Odyssey, which he had read from Charles Lamb's adaptations as a child. In fact, he considered him the epitome of the heroic ideal and constantly thought of giving the myth a new dimension in modern literature...

By: James Mark Baldwin (1861-1934)

Book cover The Story of the Mind

By: James Sully (1842-1923)

Book cover Illusions A Psychological Study

By: James Weir (1856-1906)

Book cover The Dawn of Reason or, Mental Traits in the Lower Animals

By: Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)

Confessions by Jean-Jacques Rousseau Confessions

Considered to mark the emergence of a new literary form, the unvarnished autobiography, Confessions by Jean-Jacques Rousseau was first published in 1782, four years after his death. The philosopher and educationist whose political philosophy is credited with having inspired the French Revolution, Rousseau was a man of immense wit, talent and depth of thinking. His skill in art, music, literature and cooking along with his magnificent body of work in philosophy, politics, education and sociology have made him a legendary figure...

By: John Addington Symonds (1840-1893)

Book cover A Problem in Modern Ethics

“Society lies under the spell of ancient terrorism and coagulated errors. Science is either wilfully hypocritical or radically misinformed.” John Addington Symonds struck many an heroic note in this courageous (albeit anonymously circulated) essay. He is a worthy Virgil guiding the reader through the Inferno of suffering which emerging medico-legal definitions of the sexually deviant were prepared to inflict on his century and on the one which followed. Symonds pleads for sane human values in...

By: John Aubrey (1626-1697)

Book cover Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects

By: John B. Bury (1861-1927)

Book cover The Idea of Progress An inguiry into its origin and growth

By: John Berryman (1919-1988)

Book cover Card Trick

The Psi Lodge had their ways and means of applying pressure, when pressure was needed. But the peculiar talent this fellow showed was one that even they'd never heard of...!

Book cover Modus Vivendi
Book cover Vigorish
Book cover The Right Time

By: John D. Beresford (1873-1947)

Book cover The Psychical Researcher's Tale - The Sceptical Poltergeist

By: John Dewey (1859-1952)

Book cover Human Nature And Conduct - Part 1, The Place of Habit in Conduct

John Dewey, an early 20th Century American philosopher, psychologist, educational theorist saw Social Psychology as much a physical science as Biology and Chemistry. This project encompasses Part 1 of 4 of his book Human Nature and Conduct. Dewey's uses the word "HABIT" as a specialized catch-all word to describe how a person and his/her objective environment interact. This interaction is the basis for moral judgement. Dewey writes: "All habits are demands for certain kinds of activity; and they constitute the self.” In other places he also asserts that "Habits are Will." - Summary by William Jones, Soloist

By: John Linwood Pitts (1836-1917)

Book cover Witchcraft and Devil Lore in the Channel Islands Transcripts from the Official Records of the Guernsey Royal Court, with an English Translation and Historical Introduction

By: John M. (John Metcalf) Taylor (1845-1918)

Book cover The Witchcraft Delusion in Colonial Connecticut (1647-1697)

By: John Poole Sandlands (1838-1915)

Book cover Voice and Public Speaking

I write for public speakers. I wish to take them into my confidence. I feel I can do them good. My object is to help them to speak with greater ease and efficiency. When the voice is developed and in a condition to answer the calls made upon it, then it will naturally seek to put its powers into operation.... Develop the powers of the voice and it will not be satisfied till it find scope for their exercise. This is a marvellous feature of the human voice, and yet, perhaps, it is more or less common to all the powers we possess...

By: John Ruskin (1819-1900)

Book cover Sesame and Lilies

Sesame and Lilies proposes and answers the questions, how, what and why to read in the context of how and why to live. About earlier and later editions of the book containing the first two lectures alone, Ruskin wrote: "...chiefly written for young people belonging to the upper or undistressed, middle classes; who may be supposed to have choice of the objects and command of the industries of their life... if read in connection with “Unto This Last” it contains the chief truths I have endeavored through all of my past life to display… and am chiefly thankful to have learned and taught...

By: Joseph R. Buchanan (1814-1899)

Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, April 1887 Volume 1, Number 3
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, March 1887 Volume 1, Number 2
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, October 1887 Volume 1, Number 9
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, November 1887 Volume 1, Number 10
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, December 1887 Volume 1, Number 11
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, June 1887 Volume 1, Number 5
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, May 1887 Volume 1, Number 4
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, February 1887 Volume 1, Number 1
Book cover Buchanan's Journal of Man, August 1887 Volume 1, Number 7

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