Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from A Study of Man and the Way to Health
There never was a time in the history of letters when so great facilities and so few barriers were presented to the study of man as now. Investigation is to-day practically free. There are no barriers to any study that does not interfere directly with the life, liberty and happiness of another. There may, indeed, be found a lurking remnant of the old persecution, but fortunately it is seldom marshaled in the name of religion. It rather issues from the camp of the nihilist, as a rather mild form of ridicule of him who ven tures to question the realm scientifically dubbed the un knowable. Yet even here the progress of science in the realm of nature's finer forces has been so great that the majority of really earnest and intelligent persons declare, that they are not prepared to say what is possible, and what not, and that they would hardly be surprised at any thing. Among the really devout and earnest souls it is usually enough that one earnestly seeks the truth for the benefit of man in order to enlist attention and courteous examination. The motto of these is any thing that is right and true for the benefit of humanity. It is true that there does not appear on the surface of things now-a-days so great lsolicitude for the glory of God, for the reason that it has been discerned in these later times that the glory of God depends on the elevation of man; for only as man's thoughts are purified and his life elevated can he seek and adore the source of all life, the bestower of all good, and the fountain of all truth.
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