Intellect, 9:"the glory which never was on sea or land." Dr. Bennett of Yale expresses these ideas in veryIntellect, 10:that the gates of the future are always open." - Bennett, Charles A., A Philosophical Study ofIntellect, 14:of which the average man knows nothing. As Dr. Bennett says "the mystics themselves have describedIntellect, 14:belong together. They have found the clue." - Bennett, Charles A., A Philosophical Study ofIntellect, 70:up the task and carries the work forward. Dr. Bennett of Yale says, at the close of his book onIntellect, 70:to be completed by some touch from without." - Bennett, Charles A., A Philosophical Study ofIntellect, 136:for one has not yet learnt to contemplate. Dr. Bennett describes this stage in some comments uponIntellect, 136:out of thyself without any act of thine'." - Bennett, Charles A., A Philosophical Study of |