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James: The Varieties of Religious Experience
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James: The Varieties of Religious Experience  

William James  and Matthew Bradley

Abstract

‘By their fruits ye shall know them, not by their roots.’ The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) is William James’s classic survey of religious belief in its most personal, and often its most heterodox, aspects. Asking questions such as how we define evil to ourselves, the difference between a healthy and a divided mind, the value of saintly behaviour, and what animates and characterizes the mental landscape of sudden conversion, James’s masterpiece stands at a unique moment in the relationship between belief and culture. Faith in institutional religion and dogmatic theology was fading away, and the search for an authentic religion rooted in personality and subjectivity was a project conducted as an urgent necessity. With psychological insight, philosophical rigour, and a determination not to jump to the conclusion that in tracing religion’s mental causes we necessarily diminish its truth or value, in the Varieties James wrote a truly foundational text for modern belief. Matthew Bradley’s wide-ranging new edition examines the ideas that continue to fuel modern debates on atheism and faith.

Bibliographic Information

Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN:
9780199691647
DOI:
10.1093/owc/9780199691647.001.0001

Authors

William James, author

Matthew Bradley, editor


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Subject(s) in Oxford World's Classics

  • 20th Century Literature
  • American Literature
  • Fiction, Novelists, and Prose Writers

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Contents

  • Front Matter
    • Acknowledgements
    • Introduction
    • Note on the Text
    • Select Bibliography
    • A Chronology of William James
  • The Varieties of Religious Experience
    • Lecture I Religion and NeurologyWilliam James
    • Lecture II Circumscription of the TopicWilliam James
    • Lecture III The Reality of the UnseenWilliam James
    • Lectures IV and V The Religion of Healthy-MindednessWilliam James
    • Lectures VI and VII The Sick SoulWilliam James
    • Lecture VIII The Divided Self, and the Process of its UnificationWilliam James
    • Lecture IX ConversionWilliam James
    • Lecture X Conversion—ConcludedWilliam James
    • Lectures XI, XII, and XIII SaintlinessWilliam James
    • Lectures XIV and XV The Value of SaintlinessWilliam James
    • Lectures XVI and XVII MysticismWilliam James
    • Lecture XVIII PhilosophyWilliam James
    • Lecture XIX Other CharacteristicsWilliam James
    • Lecture XX ConclusionsWilliam James
    • PostscriptWilliam James
  • End Matter
    • Explanatory Notes
    • Index
  • Oxford University Press
Copyright © 2023.

date: 21 March 2023

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