The Life of the Mind: WillingIncludes chapters on Plato, Socrates, Thomas Aquinas, and Nietzsche. |
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Stranica 19
Freedom meant that one could do as one pleased , forced neither by the bidding of a master nor by some physical necessity that demanded laboring for wages in order to sustain the body nor by some somatic handicap such as ill health or ...
Freedom meant that one could do as one pleased , forced neither by the bidding of a master nor by some physical necessity that demanded laboring for wages in order to sustain the body nor by some somatic handicap such as ill health or ...
Stranica 32
Religious and medieval as well as secular and modern philosophy found many different ways of assimilating the Will , the organ of freedom and the future , to the older order of things . For however we may look at these matters ...
Religious and medieval as well as secular and modern philosophy found many different ways of assimilating the Will , the organ of freedom and the future , to the older order of things . For however we may look at these matters ...
Stranica 195
freedom. and. the novus ordo seclorum » Very early in these deliberations I warned of an inevitable flaw in all critical examinations of the willing faculty . It is a rather obvious one but easy to overlook in discussing the particular ...
freedom. and. the novus ordo seclorum » Very early in these deliberations I warned of an inevitable flaw in all critical examinations of the willing faculty . It is a rather obvious one but easy to overlook in discussing the particular ...
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The Philosophers and the Will | 11 |
the tonality of mental activities | 34 |
The | 53 |
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according action activity actually answer appearances argument Aristotle Augustine become beginning body called cause centuries chap choice Christian comes command common concept concerned contingency course created deal death desire distinction doubt Duns Scotus entirely eternal everything evil existence experience fact faculty feeling final force freedom future German Idealism given Greek happened Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's Hence human Ibid idea Intellect Judging judgment Kant kind later less living longer look man's matter means mental mind namely nature necessary necessity never Nietzsche notion object once original particular past Paul philosophy possible present primacy problem question Quoted reality reason reflection relation remains Roman Scotus seems sense soul speaking taste tell things thinking Thomas thought tion translation true truth turn universal whole Will's