The world is chiefly a mental fact. From mind it receives the forms of time and space, the principle of casuality[sic], color, warmth, and beauty. Were there no mind, there would be no world.
"Means and Ends of Education" by John Lancaster Spalding, (Ch. 1), 1895.
![The world is chiefly a mental fact. From mind it receives the forms of time and space, the principle of casuality[sic], color, warmth, and beauty. Were there no mind, there would be no world.](http://cdn.quoteddaily.com/images/john-lancaster-spalding/the-world-is-chiefly-a-mental-fact-from-mind-it-receives-the-forms-of-time-and-space-the-principle-of.jpg)