[129] "Varieties," p. 508.

[130] "Varieties," p. 515.

[131] "Varieties," p. 270.

[132] "Varieties," p. 235.

[133] "William James and Other Essays," p. 23.

[134] Ames: "Psychology of Religious Experiences," p. viii.

[135] "A Psychological Study of Religion," p. 311.

[136] M. S. Fletcher: "The Psychology of the New Testament," p. 245.

[137] "The Realm of Ends," p. 387.

[138] The hermit saints, from this modern standpoint, would not deserve to be called religious at all, as witness this remark of Ames: "If religion is participation in the ideal values of the social consciousness, then those who do not share in this consciousness are non-religious."—"Psychology of Religious Experiences," p. 356.