Charles Hartshorne

 

 

"The great psychicalists, from Leibniz to Peirce and Whitehead, treat the psychical not as an addition to mere matter, but as, in its possible varieties, the whole of what matter is, even in its most primitive forms (atoms or particles)."

(Charles Hartshorne, Wisdom as Moderation, New York, 1987, p. 21).

 

 

    * Der Socinianismus : nach Stellung in der Gesammtentwicklung des christlichen Geistes, nach seinem historischen Verlauf und nach seinem Lehrbegriff / dargestellt von Otto Fock. Kiel : C. Schr�der, 1847. 2 v. in 1 (xv, 722 p.) ; 21 cm. Includes bibliographical references.
"With some exceptions we have felt compelled to rely upon existing translations of non-English sources. ... P]ortions of the ... translations are ... our own; ... the passages from Lequier ... and the admirable Fock paraphrases of Socinus, are here, so far as we know, presented for the first time in English." (Charles Hartshorne and William L. Reese, Philosophers Speak of God, University of Chicago Press, 1953, p. ix).

 

W. Paul Tabaka
Contact [email protected]

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1