The Life of the Mind: WillingIncludes chapters on Plato, Socrates, Thomas Aquinas, and Nietzsche. |
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Stranica 96
Finally : Within the framework of the Confessions , no solution to the riddle of this “ monstrous ” faculty is given ; how the will , divided against itself , finally reaches the moment when it becomes “ entire ” remains a mystery .
Finally : Within the framework of the Confessions , no solution to the riddle of this “ monstrous ” faculty is given ; how the will , divided against itself , finally reaches the moment when it becomes “ entire ” remains a mystery .
Stranica 242
She was intending to go back , in the spring of 1976 , to finish the series ; meanwhile she had given most of Thinking and Willing to her classes at the New School for Social Research in New York . Judging , she had not started , though ...
She was intending to go back , in the spring of 1976 , to finish the series ; meanwhile she had given most of Thinking and Willing to her classes at the New School for Social Research in New York . Judging , she had not started , though ...
Stranica 266
When you represent something to you that is absent , you close as it were those senses by which objects in their objectivity are given to you . The sense of taste is a sense in which it is as though you sense yourself , like an inner ...
When you represent something to you that is absent , you close as it were those senses by which objects in their objectivity are given to you . The sense of taste is a sense in which it is as though you sense yourself , like an inner ...
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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