The Life of the Mind: WillingHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978 Includes chapters on Plato, Socrates, Thomas Aquinas, and Nietzsche. |
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Stranica 130
... volitional acts is . . . the power to choose between opposite things and to revoke the choice once it has been made ... volition - in contradistinction to the Nietzschean and Duns Scotus and the primacy of the Will Heideggerian Will 130.
... volitional acts is . . . the power to choose between opposite things and to revoke the choice once it has been made ... volition - in contradistinction to the Nietzschean and Duns Scotus and the primacy of the Will Heideggerian Will 130.
Stranica 131
... volition , in which " indifference " is directly chosen , is an important testimony to human freedom , to the mind's ability to avoid all coercive determination from the outside . It is because of their freedom that men , though part ...
... volition , in which " indifference " is directly chosen , is an important testimony to human freedom , to the mind's ability to avoid all coercive determination from the outside . It is because of their freedom that men , though part ...
Stranica 136
... volition.72 The Will's freedom does not consist in the selection of means for a predetermined end - eudaimonia or beatitudo or blessedness - precisely because this end is already given by human nature ; it consists in freely affirming ...
... volition.72 The Will's freedom does not consist in the selection of means for a predetermined end - eudaimonia or beatitudo or blessedness - precisely because this end is already given by human nature ; it consists in freely affirming ...
Sadržaj
Time and mental activities | 11 |
The Will and the modern age | 19 |
The problem of the new | 28 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 11
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
abyss of freedom action actually Anaximander antiquity argument Aristotle Augustine Augustine's become beginning Bonansea called cause centuries chap Christian command concept contingency created Critique Critique of Judgment death Descartes desire divine Duns Scotus Editor's Postface Epictetus eternal Etienne Gilson everything evil existence experience fact future German German Idealism Gifford Lectures God's Greek Hannah Arendt Hegel Heidegger Hence I-can I-will Ibid insofar Intellect Judging judgment Kant Kant's living man's matter means medieval mental activities mind mind's modern age nature necessity never Nicomachean Ethics Nietzsche Nietzsche's nill Notes to pages notion novus ordo seclorum object original past Paul philosophy of History Plato possible present primacy question Quoted reality realm reason Roman seems sense sheer soul speaking speculative Summa Theologica taste temporal things thinkers thinking ego Thomas thought tion trans translation truth turn velle volition Will's words world of appearances