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Professor Charles Zueblin, Ph.B., of the University of Chicago, will give the second of his series of five lectures on "A Democratic Religion" in Emerson D this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock.
These lectures are given in connection with the extension courses of the University of Chicago, where Professor Zueblin has held the chair of Sociology since 1902. A graduate of the Yale Divinity School and for two years student at the University of Leipzig, the religious side of sociology has especially appealed to him, and the present course is an attempt to set forth the fundamental phases and development of a democratic religion of today. The key-note was struck in the first lecture last Monday when Professor Zueblin maintained that the great essential of a man's religion is its well-marked individuality, setting forth the chief agencies that are instrumental in moulding a child's conception of religion.
The course is given under the auspices of the Ethical Society and a committee of ten, with Professor William James '69 as chairman. The remaining lectures will be given March 9, 16, and 23, at the same place and time.
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