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First published in 1914, as the second edition of a 1912 original, this book provides a detailed discussion of the relationship between evolution and the central Christian principle of atonement. The text attempts to reconcile concepts such as sin and alienation from God with the biological focus of evolutionary theory.
Originally published in 1920, this book provides a concise discussion of aesthetic evolution, putting forward the view that the concept of beauty holds a position of fundamental importance in the constitution of reality. An introduction and an appendix on 'Art Forms in Development' are also included.
This 1924 book presents the content of four lectures delivered by the author at the University of Cambridge during 1923 and 1924, as part of the Hulsean Lectures series. The text is based around an examination of the nature of being in its relationship with the process of existence.
This 1918 book restates the Doctrine of the Holy Trinity from an evolutionary standpoint. Implicit in this aim is the requirement that a doctrine's truth is not essentially attached to the terminology in which it is expressed, so that the key idea survives as the original terminology becomes archaic.
This 1915 book provides a detailed discussion of the relationship between metaphysics and material reality, arguing for a reconciliation between Christian theology and evolutionary theory. The main premise of the text is that there can be no strict division between the soul and the corporeal aspects of human life.
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