Chapter
1 III| are doubtless aware; the personal narrative of a filibuster
2 III| achieved the extinction of personal selfishness, but she had
3 IV | death. Before the sense of personal identity comes, death cannot
4 V | could scarcely emulate; the personal trait, the individual peculiarity,
5 V | conduct has been to mask all personal feeling as far as possible, -
6 V | Herbert Spencer's essay on Personal Beauty. The beauty of such
7 V | trivial actualities and the personal emotionalism of Western
8 VII| inquiries are made as to the personal character and family history
9 VII| merely in the matter of personal attentions, but in making
10 VII| vexations, - their~{p. 178}~personal acquaintance with fleas,
11 VII| acquaintance with fleas, their personal dislikes and discomforts;
12 IX | in a previous life; yet personal transmigration does not
13 IX | transmigration? How can there be personal foreknowledge of rebirth
14 IX | Buddhist philosophy there is no personal transmigration, and no individual
15 IX | aid of the action of the personal mind. This action ceases:
16 IX | neither-namelessness-nor-not-namelessness." Something of personal mentality continues to float
17 IX | Powers must never be used for personal pleasure, but only for the
18 IX | evolution when faith in a personal God is passing away, - when
19 X | the boy had said about the personal appearance and the facial
20 XI | WITHIN THE CIRCLE~ NEITHER personal pain nor personal pleasure
21 XI | NEITHER personal pain nor personal pleasure can be really expressed
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