Paradise Found, by William F. Warren, [1885], at sacred-texts.com
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DEDICATION | |
PREFACE | |
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PART FIRST. |
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THE LOCATION OF EDEN: STATE OF THE QUESTION. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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THE RESULTS OF EXPLORERS, HISTORIC AND LEGENDARY. |
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Columbus approaching the gate | |
The report of Sir John de Maundeville | |
Adventures of Prince Eirek | |
The voyages of St. Brandan and of Oger | |
The success of the author of The Book of Enoch | |
An equestrian's anticipations | |
David Livingstone a searcher for Eden | |
Unanimous verdict: Non est inventus | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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THE RESULTS OF THEOLOGIANS. |
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Ideas of the church fathers | |
Opinions of Luther and of Calvin | |
Contemporary opinion entirely conflicting | |
Inconclusive character of the Biblical data | |
The garden "eastward" | |
The "Euphrates" | |
The problem "unsolved if not insoluble" | |
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CHAPTER III. |
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THE RESULTS OF NON-THEOLOGICAL SCHOLARS: NATURALISTS, ETHNOLOGISTS, ETC. |
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The unity of the human species | |
But one "mother-region" | |
Its locationten different answers | |
Views of Darwin, Häckel, Peschel, etc. | |
Views of Quatrefages, Obry, etc. | |
Locations of lost Atlantis | |
Theory of Friedrich Delitzsch | |
Theory of E. Beauvois | |
Theory of Gerald Massey | |
The Utopians | |
Despair of a solution | |
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PART SECOND. |
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A FRESH HYPOTHESIS: PRIMITIVE EDEN AT THE NORTH POLE. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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THE HYPOTHESIS, AND THE CONDITIONS OF ITS ADMISSIBILITY. |
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Statement of the hypothesis | |
Seven sciences to be satisfied | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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IMPORTANT NEW FEATURES AT ONCE INTRODUCED INTO THE PROBLEM OF THE SITE OF EDEN AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THESE FOR A VALID SOLUTION. |
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Seven peculiarities of a polar Eden | |
Our hypothesis consequently most difficult | |
Its certain break-down if not true | |
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PART THIRD. |
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THE HYPOTHESIS SCIENTIFICALLY TESTED AND CONFIRMED. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF SCIENTIFIC GEOGONY. |
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Popular prepossessions | |
Secular refrigeration of the earth | |
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Inevitable implications of the doctrine | |
Bearing of these upon our problem | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF ASTRONOMICAL GEOGRAPHY. |
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Length of the polar day | |
Mistakes of Geikie and Lyell | |
The actual duration of daylight | |
Experience of Weyprecht and Payer | |
Experience of Barentz | |
Citation from Baron Nordenskjöld | |
The statement of Captain Pim | |
The explanation of discrepancies | |
A safe settlement of the question | |
The polar night | |
Aspects and progress of the polar day | |
A paradisaic abode | |
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CHAPTER III. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF PHYSIOGRAPHICAL GEOLOGY. |
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A primitive circumpolar continent | |
Anticipated by Klee | |
Speculations of Wallace | |
Postulated by Professor Heer | |
Also by Baron Nordenskjöld | |
Testimony of Starkie Gardner | |
Testimony of Geikie | |
Theories as to its submergence | |
Adhémar's theory | |
Theory of tidal action | |
Leibnitz's theory of crust-collapse | |
Summary of evidence under this head | |
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CHAPTER IV. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF PREHISTORIC CLIMATOLOGY. |
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Primeval temperature at the Pole | |
The evidence of scientific geogony | |
The evidence of paleontological botany | |
Testimony of life-history | |
Estimates of Professor Heer | |
Declaration of Sir Charles Lyell | |
Conclusion | |
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CHAPTER V. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF PALEONTOLOGICAL BOTANY. |
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The starting-point of all floral types | |
A remarkable recent discovery | |
Sir Joseph Hooker | |
The contribution of Heer | |
Of Professor Asa Gray | |
The claim of Count Saporta | |
The conclusions of Otto Kuntze | |
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CHAPTER VI. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF PALEONTOLOGICAL ZOÖLOGY. |
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Geographical distribution of animals | |
First remarkable fact | |
Second remarkable fact | |
Language of Professor Orton | |
Language of Professor Packard | |
Mr. Alfred Russel Wallace cited | |
Conclusion | |
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CHAPTER VII. |
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THE TESTIMONY OF PALEONTOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND GENERAL ETHNOLOGY. |
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One traveler who has been in Eden | |
His note-books lost | |
What says Paléoethnique science? | |
The first conclusions of Quatrefages | |
His premonitions of a new doctrine | |
Count Saporta's conclusions | |
F. Müller and M. Wagner's views | |
Anthropogony by virtue of ice and cold | |
An unacceptable theory | |
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CHAPTER VIII. |
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CONCLUSION OF PART THIRD. |
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A word from Principal Dawson | |
Summary of results thus far | |
An unexpected reinforcement | |
"Where did Life Begin?" | |
Confirmatory extracts | |
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PART FOURTH. |
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THE HYPOTHESIS CONFIRMED BY ETHNIC TRADITION. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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ANCIENT COSMOLOGY AND MYTHICAL GEOGRAPHY. |
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The mistaken modern assumption | |
The "True Key" | |
General statement | |
The "Mountain of the World" | |
The same in Egyptian Mythology | |
In the Akkadian, Assyrian, and Babylonian | |
In the Chinese | |
Lithe Indo-Aryan | |
In the Buddhistic | |
In the Iranian | |
In the Greek and Roman | |
The Underworld | |
Cautions as to interpretation | |
The chorography of Christian hymns | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN ANCIENT JAPANESE THOUGHT. |
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The most ancient Japanese book | |
Japanese cosmogony | |
Izanagi's spear | |
"The Island of the Congealed Drop" | |
Sir Edward Reed places it at the Pole | |
Mr. Griffis reaches the same conclusion | |
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CHAPTER III. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN CHINESE THOUGHT. |
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The Tauist paradise | |
Descriptions | |
The stupendous world-pillar | |
Connects the terrestrial and celestial paradises | |
Same idea in the Talmud | |
"The Strength of the Hill of Sion" | |
Shang-te's upper and lower palaces | |
At the celestial and terrestrial Poles | |
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CHAPTER IV. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN EAST ARYAN OR HINDU THOUGHT. |
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The world of the Brahmans | |
The abode of Yama | |
The varshas of the upper world | |
The northward journey to Mount Meru | |
The descent to Uttarakuru | |
Illustrations of the Puranic world | |
Ilâvrita, the Hindu's Eden | |
Its north polar position | |
Lenormant's language | |
Ritter's unwitting testimony | |
"The polar region is Meru" | |
"Meru the Garden of the Tree of Life" | |
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CHAPTER V. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN IRANIAN OR OLD-PERSIAN THOUGHT. |
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The primitive pair and their abode | |
Key to the Iranian cosmography | |
The Chinvat Bridge | |
Current misinterpretations | |
Twelve questions answered | |
True nature of the bridge | |
Its position | |
Position of Kvanîras | |
The mythic geography of the Persians | |
Diagram of the Keshvares | |
Polar position of "Iran the Ancient" | |
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CHAPTER VI. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN AKKADIAN, ASSYRIAN, AND BABYLONIAN THOUGHT. |
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The sacred mountain | |
Chaldæan cosmology | |
Lenormant's exposition | |
Three inconsistencies | |
Location of the world-mountain | |
Lenormant's difficulties | |
The true solution | |
Two Akkads | |
The mount of the Underworld | |
It determines the site of Kharsak | |
And this the site of the Akkadian Eden | |
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CHAPTER VII. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN ANCIENT EGYPTIAN THOUGHT. |
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Underestimates of Egyptian science | |
Six theses in Egyptian cosmology | |
Its earth a sphere | |
Northern and southern termini | |
Four supports of heaven at the North | |
A parallel in Buddhist cosmology | |
The southern hemisphere the Underworld | |
The highest North the abode of the gods | |
An interesting hieroglyph | |
Plato's Egyptian Eden-story | |
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CHAPTER VIII. |
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THE CRADLE OF THE RACE IN ANCIENT GREEK THOUGHT |
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Supposed discrepancies of tradition | |
Possible agreement | |
A reminiscence of Mount Meru | |
Renan and Lenormant | |
Lost Atlantis | |
Deukalion, a man of the North | |
The Isles of Kronos | |
The Golden Age | |
Wolfgang Menzel's verdict | |
Conclusion and transition | |
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PART FIFTH. |
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FURTHER VERIFICATIONS OF THE HYPOTHESIS BASED UPON A STUDY OF THE PECULIARITIES OF A POLAR PARADISE. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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THE EDEN STARS. |
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Stellar motion at the Pole | |
Has tradition any reminiscence of such? | |
The strange doctrine of Anaxagoras | |
Chaldæan and Egyptian traditions | |
A natural explanation | |
The myth of Phaëthon | |
Iranian and Aztec traditions | |
Result | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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THE EDEN DAY. |
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Length of day at the Pole | |
Sunrise in the South | |
The tradition of the Northmen | |
The tradition of the ancient Persians | |
The tradition of the East Aryans | |
The year-day of Homer | |
The tradition of the Navajos | |
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CHAPTER III. |
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THE EDEN ZENITH. |
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The polar zenith is the Pole | |
This the true heaven of the first men | |
The Hebrew conception | |
The Egyptian conception | |
The Akkadian conception | |
The Assyrio-Babylonian conception | |
The Sabæan conception | |
The Vedic conception | |
The Buddhistic conception | |
The Phnician conception | |
The Greek conception | |
The Etruscan and Roman conception | |
The Japanese conception | |
The Chinese conception | |
The ancient Germanic conception | |
The ancient Finnic conception | |
How came the Biblical Eden to be in the East? | |
Solution of the problem | |
Confirmations and illustrations | |
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CHAPTER IV. |
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THE NAVEL OF THE EARTH. |
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Prevalence of the expression | |
Its symbolical and commemorative character | |
The Jerusalem earth-centre | |
That of the Greeks | |
That of the Babylonians | |
That of the Hindus | |
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That of the Persians | |
That of the Chinese | |
That of the Japanese | |
That of the Northmen | |
That of the Mexicans | |
That of the Peruvians and others | |
Result | |
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CHAPTER V. |
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THE QUADRIFURCATE RIVER. |
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Origin and nature of this river | |
Sacred hydrography of the Persians | |
All waters have one headspring | |
Also one place of discharge | |
Exposition of the system | |
Similar ideas among the Greeks | |
The Vedic system | |
The Puranic | |
Traces in Christian legend | |
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CHAPTER VI. |
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THE CENTRAL TREE. |
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The tree in the midst of the garden | |
Were there two? | |
Its inevitable significance if at the North Pole | |
The Yggdrasil of the Northmen | |
The World-tree of the Akkadians | |
The Tat-pillar of the Egyptians | |
The Winged Oak of the Phnicians | |
The White Hôm of the Persians | |
The cosmic Aśvattha of the Hindus | |
The holy Palm of the Greeks | |
The Bodhi tree of the Buddhists | |
The Irmensul of the Saxons | |
The Arbre Sec of the Middle Ages | |
The Tong of the Chinese | |
The World-reed of the Navajos | |
The Apple-tree of Avalon | |
The star-bearing World-tree of the Finns | |
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CHAPTER VII. |
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THE EXUBERANCE OF LIFE. |
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Ethnic traditions of the Earth's deterioration | |
Also of the deterioration of mankind | |
Stature and longevity of primeval men | |
All credible on our hypothesis | |
Language of Professor Nicholson | |
A citation from Figuier | |
The gigantic Sequoia of Arctic origin | |
Animal life in the Tertiary period | |
Primitive forms by no means monstrosities | |
All this wealth of fauna from the North | |
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CHAPTER VIII. |
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REVIEW OF THE ARGUMENT. |
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Nature of the argument | |
Seven tests applicable to any location | |
Seven others peculiar to a location at the Pole | |
A double demonstration | |
Bailly's approximation to the truth | |
Another independent line of evidence | |
Philosophy of previous failures | |
Philosophy of mediæval confusion | |
Patristic descriptions made plain | |
The world of Cosmas Indicopleustes | |
The world of Columbus | |
The world of Dante | |
How highest heaven came to be under foot | |
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PART SIXTH. |
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THE SIGNIFICANCE OF OUR RESULTS. |
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CHAPTER I. |
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THEIR BEARING UPON THE STUDY OF BIOLOGY AND TERRESTRIAL PHYSICS. |
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The sciences immediately affected | |
The services of biology to archæology | |
The services of archæology to biology | |
Narrowness of many biologists | |
Evils thereof | |
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The true corrective | |
The latest generalization of paleontology | |
Anticipated in two Persian myths | |
Terrestrial life-gamut of the Hindus | |
Its lesson to students of the Origin of Life | |
Extraordinary biological conditions | |
Most favorable of all at the Poles | |
Biological superiority of the North Pole | |
Reasons to be more fully investigated | |
Heightened fascination of polar exploration | |
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CHAPTER II. |
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THE BEARING OF OUR RESULTS ON THE STUDY OF ANCIENT LITERATURE. |
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Darwin's primeval man | |
His discovery of the sky | |
And of trees of infinite height | |
The "short memories" of Vedic worshipers | |
Their ocean-producing imaginations | |
Bunbury on Homeric science | |
Exegetical distortions of ancient thought | |
Homer's cosmology re-expounded | |
First, as to the movement of the sun | |
Second, as to the location of Hades | |
Third, as to .the cosmic water-system | |
Fourth, as to the Olympos of the gods | |
Fifth, as to the tall pillars of Atlas | |
The exegetical method dictated by our results | |
Its fruitfulness in the future | |
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CHAPTER III. |
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THE BEARING OF OUR RESULTS ON THE PROBLEM OF THE ORIGIN AND EARLIEST FORM OF RELIGION. |
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The pan-ethnic account | |
Hume's dissent | |
The doctrine of Comte | |
Miller's refutation of primitive fetichism | |
Sir John Lubbock's scheme | |
Refutation by Roskoff and others | |
Caspari's theory | |
The theory of Jules Baissac | |
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Current approximations of teaching | |
As to the origin of the arts | |
As to intellectual powers of the first men | |
As to their super-fetichistic attitude | |
As to their monogamous family form | |
As to their capacity for monotheism | |
Seven conclusion | |
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CHAPTER IV. |
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THE BEARING OF OUR. RESULTS ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY AND ON THE THEORY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF CIVILIZATION. |
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The apostles of primeval savagery | |
Their doctrine | |
Sub-savage stupidity of the first men | |
Dr. Wilhelm Mannhardt's representation | |
A most important primitive discovery | |
Daphne not a tree | |
Emphatic demand for antediluvian longevity | |
The new Babel | |
Nine memoranda | |
Primeval human history | |
The ancient ethnic view Biblical and true | |
Plato's antediluvian age | |
The consensus of all ancient religions | |
The "Stone Age" in the light of our results | |
Origin of postdiluvian laws and states | |
An imaginary conversation | |
A pagan testimony | |
To those who hear not Moses and the Prophet's | |
Conclusion | |
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APPENDIX. |
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I. The Earth of Columbus not a True Sphere | |
II. How the Earth was Peopled | |
III. Reception of "The True Key" | |
IV. The Earth and World of the Hindus | |
V. The World-Pillar of the Rig Veda | |
VI. Homer's Abode of the Dead | |
VII. Latest Polar Research | |
VIII. Trustworthiness of Early Tradition | |
IX. Index of Authors cited | |
X. Index to the Work |