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John S. Haller

    The Buddha's Midwife: Paul Carus and the Spread of Buddhism in America
    Distant Voices: Sketches of a Swedenborgian World View: Essays on Henry James, Sr and Ralph Waldo Emerson; Charles Fouri
    Michael A. Musmanno
    Fictions of Certitude: Science, Faith, and the Search for Meaning, 1840-1920
    • Positivism : Auguste Comte -- Assent : John Henry Newman -- The unknown : Herbert Spencer -- Higher intelligence : Alfred Russel Wallace -- Agnosticism : Thomas Henry Huxley -- Cosmic theism : John Fiske -- Will to believe : William James -- Telesis : Lester Frank Ward -- Entheism : Paul Carus -- Roads not taken

      Fictions of Certitude: Science, Faith, and the Search for Meaning, 1840-1920
    • Michael A. Musmanno

      Lawyer, Legislator, Judge, and Showman

      • 310pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      The narrative explores the life of Musmanno, a self-made man whose patrician appearance belied his origins. His journals reveal a complex figure marked by contradictions, navigating a world where his ambitions often clashed with reality. The book delves into his relationships, highlighting moments of control and influence over others, painting a portrait of a man shaped by both his successes and struggles in a changing society.

      Michael A. Musmanno
    • Between the Parliament of Religions which met in Chicago in 1893 at the time of the Columbian Exposition, and World War I, Asian religions and philosophies made a significant impact on the United States, causing a profound change in thinking about them, including their relevance to the present. More so than any other religion, Buddhism became a crutch for those who, in the final decades of the nineteenth century, became disillusioned with Christianity’s claim to superiority over all other faiths. Like so many intellectuals at the time, Carus was seeking a path from the older theologies into a new secular world and its uncertain future. Through  The Buddha's Midwife , Paul Carus not only brought elements of Buddhism to the United States, but much of the Western world. This book was written to recount the journey of one of the principal contributors to the spread of Buddhist thinking in American thought and culture. Now, reissued for the first time since its original publishing, The Buddha's Midwife returns to excite and inspire new audiences. 

      The Buddha's Midwife: Paul Carus and the Spread of Buddhism in America