Book
1 Int| a distinctive system of religion and ethics.~ The first
2 Int| a thousand years the new religion was supreme. "All education
3 Int| was given to the Indian religion, and thenceforth for centuries
4 Int| Buddhism was the chief religion, . . . and the doctrines
5 Int| from its ally; the Buddhist religion, and not the Confucian ethics,
6 Int| the place of the Indian religion the pantheistic philosophy
7 Int| supposed early form. This religion was intensely national and
8 Int| education, literature, religion and ethics, all were supplied
9 Int| knew no quarrel with the religion of the Buddha, so even after
10 Int| was not the rejection of a religion for a philosophy, for Buddhism
11 Int| alliance with the Buddhist religion; as trustingly it adopted
12 Int| ethical principles, politics, religion, the art of war, and the
13 Int| forth the philosophy and religion, the ethics and politics
14 Int| treasures of philosophy and religion, the high aspirations after
15 I | what they call our national religion and confound it with the
16 I | shall not distinguish the religion of our country from that
17 I | Way of the Gods' is not a religion by itself. So I cannot accept
18 I | the Sages as our native religion. I do not profess to understand
19 II | They have accepted the true religion," It is most contemptible,
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