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    Chapter 4 - Page 2

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    general, by the
    Christian religion in particular, in the life of mankind, and of
    the significance attributed to them by science.

    Just as the individual man cannot live without having some theory
    of the meaning of his life, and is always, though often
    unconsciously, framing his conduct in accordance with the meaning
    he attributes to his life, so too associations of men living in
    similar conditions--nations--cannot but have theories of the
    meaning of their associated life and conduct ensuing from those
    theories. And as the individual man, when he attains a fresh
    stage of growth, inevitably changes his philosophy of life, and
    the grown-up man sees a different meaning in it from the child, so
    too associations of men--nations--are bound to change their
    philosophy of life and the conduct ensuing from their philosophy,
    to correspond with their development.

    The difference, as regards this, between the individual man and
    humanity as a whole, lies in the fact that the individual, in
    forming the view of life proper to the new period of life on which
    he is entering and the conduct resulting from it, benefits by the
    experience of men who have lived before him, who have already
    passed through the stage of growth upon which he is entering. But
    humanity cannot have this aid, because it is always moving along a
    hitherto untrodden track, and has no one to ask how to understand
    life, and to act in the conditions on which it is entering and
    through which no one has ever passed before.

    Nevertheless, just as a man with wife and children cannot continue
    to look at life as he looked at it when he was a child, so too in
    the face of the various changes that are taking place, the greater
    density of population, the establishment of communication between
    different peoples, the improvements of the methods of the struggle
    with nature, and the accumulation of knowledge, humanity cannot
    continue to look at life as of old, and it must frame a new
    theory of life, from which conduct may follow adapted to the new
    conditions on which it has entered and is entering.

    To meet this need humanity has the special power of producing men
    who give a new meaning to the whole of human life--a theory of
    life from which follow new forms of activity quite different from

    all preceding them. The formation of this philosophy of life
    appropriate to humanity in the new conditions on which it is
    entering, and of the practice resulting from it, is what is called
    religion.

    And therefore, in the first place, religion is not, as science
    imagines, a manifestation which at one time corresponded with the
    development of humanity, but is afterward outgrown by it. It is a
    manifestation always inherent in the life of humanity, and is
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