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1 I | instead of weakening; and a knowledge of popular beliefs is apt
2 I | the people woke up to the knowledge of why they were alive,
3 II | hide in my heart the happy knowledge that fills it;~Asking each
4 III | never of chance, but of knowledge: even the lantern illuminations
5 V | that I have mastered the knowledge of its moods and tenses,
6 V | obliged to borrow from antique knowledge. As a borrower, he is never
7 VIII | future union of Western knowledge~p. 210}~with Eastern thought
8 IX | of life and death. With knowledge of Self and the laws of
9 IX | taste, smell, touch. All our knowledge is derived and developed,
10 IX | universe as it exists. Modern knowledge can discover~{p. 230}~no
11 IX | according to our degree of knowledge, which have nothing to do
12 IX | limit of possible human knowledge. But as much of the Buddhist
13 IX | within the limit of human knowledge is found to accord with
14 IX(1)| in our present state of knowledge, is scarcely possible for
15 IX | sustained by our scientific knowledge of the past and perception
16 IX | words of the other. "Natural knowledge," wrote Huxley in one of
17 IX | future form of positive knowledge can destroy. Reinforced
18 XI | are alike nothingness: - Knowledge only is real; and unto whomsoever
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