Page:Dawn of the Day.pdf/13

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
CONTENTS
ix
PAGE
75 Neither European nor aristocratic 66
76 Evil thoughts make evil minds 67
77 On mental agonies 68
78 Justice inflicting punishment 71
79 A suggestion 72
80 The Compassionate Christian 73
81 Humanity of the saint 73
82 The spiritual onslaught 74
83 Poor humanity! 74
84 The philology of Christianity 74
85 Subtlety in deficiency 76
86 The Christian interpreters of the body 76
97 The moral miracle 77
88 Luther, the great benefactor 78
89 Doubt, a sin 79
90 Selfishness against selfishness 80
91 The honesty of God 80
92 At the death-bed of Christianity 82
93 What is truth? 83
94 Remedy for the ill-humoured 83
95 The historic refutation as the final one 83
96 "In hoc signo vinces" 84


Second Book 87
97 We grow moral not because we are moral 89
98 Transformation of morals 89
99 Where we all are irrational 89
100 Waking from a dream 89
101 Hazardous 90
102 The oldest moral judgments 90
103 There are two classes of deniers of morality 91
104 Our valuations 92
105 Pseudo-egotism 93
106 Against the definitions of moral aims 94
107 Our claim to our folly 95
108 A few theses 96
109 Self-control and moderation, and their final motive 98
110 What is it that resists? 101
111 To the admirers of objectiveness 101
112 On the natural history of duty and right 102
113 Our striving after distinction 105
114 On the sufferer's knowledge 108
115 The so-called "ego" 111