English:
Identifier: americanaunivers15beac (find matches)
Title: The Americana : a universal reference library, comprising the arts and sciences, literature, history, biograhy, geography, commerce, etc., of the world
Year: 1903 (1900s)
Authors: Beach, Frederick Converse, 1848-1918 Rines, George Edwin, 1860- Scientific American, inc
Subjects: Encyclopedias and dictionaries
Publisher: New York : Scientific American compiling dept.
Contributing Library: University of California Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive
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e Theklalegende(1877); Ramsay, The Church in the RomanEmpire. Thecophora,a suborder of Chelottia (q.v.),containing all except the leathery turtles (Athe-cce). It is defined by anatomical characters, themost conspicuous of which is the exclusive pos-session of horny epidermal shields or plates onthe shell. Consult Gadow, <Amphibia and Rep-tiles (New York igoi). Theft is a term sometimes used as synony-mous with larceny, although it is less technical,and signifies the secret and felonious abstrac-tion of the property of another with the inten-tion of converting it to the takers use, andwithout the consent of the owner. Theine, C,H,nN,0=, more often called caf-feine, an alkaloid found in tea, coffee, Paraguaytea guarana, etc. It may be prepared synthet-ically by action of methyl iodide on theobromine.Usually obtained from tea dust which containsfrom 2 to 4 per cent white silky needles, slightlysoluble in cold water and alcohol, possessing asomewhat bitter taste, and forming salts with
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HALL OF COLUMNS IN THE TEMPLE OF KARNAK ^R^::tni-pHl THEISM acids. It is used in medicine as a nerve stimu-lant. Theism, the doctrine of the existence ofa God, or Gods. It may take tlve form either ofmonotheism or polytheism, and is opposed onlyto atheism, which denies the existence of suchdivine beings. From its use to express the beliefof cultured Christian peoples, the term has beengiven a more restricted meaning. Thus, theismhas been identified with monotheism, as implyingbelief in one God, and hence is distinguishedfrom all forms of polytheism. Further, theism isdistinguished from pantheism on the one hand,and deism on the other. Pantheism (q.v.)merges God with the world-process_ and thuspractically denies his personality. Deism (q.v.)emphasizes the personality of God, but con-ceives him as existing apart from the world ofhis creation. Theism endeavors to rise aboveboth of these extremes and embrace the truthcontained in each. On the one hand it main-tains the personality of God
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