it is concerned with personal destinies, [491], [503];

with feeling and conduct, [504];

is a sthenic affection, [505];

is for life, not for knowledge, [506];

its essential contents, [508];

it postulates issues of fact, [518].

Religious emotion, [279].

Religious leaders, often nervously unstable, [6] ff., [30];

their loneliness, [335].