The Life of the Mind: ThinkingHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978 - Broj stranica: 258 Includes chapters on Plato, Socrates, Thomas Aquinas, and Nietzsche. |
Iz unutrašnjosti knjige
Rezultati 1 - 3 od 4.
Stranica 140
... Lucretius praising the advantages of mere spectatorship : " What joy it is , when out at sea the stormwinds are lashing the waters , to gaze from the shore at the heavy stress some other man is enduring ! Not that anyone's afflictions ...
... Lucretius praising the advantages of mere spectatorship : " What joy it is , when out at sea the stormwinds are lashing the waters , to gaze from the shore at the heavy stress some other man is enduring ! Not that anyone's afflictions ...
Stranica 157
... Lucretius calls Epicurus - who more than two hundred years after his death finally got a pupil worthy of him- " a god " because " he was the first to invent a way of life which is now called wisdom and through his art rescued life from ...
... Lucretius calls Epicurus - who more than two hundred years after his death finally got a pupil worthy of him- " a god " because " he was the first to invent a way of life which is now called wisdom and through his art rescued life from ...
Stranica 158
... Lucretius is not such a good example ; he does not insist on thinking but on knowing . Knowledge acquired by reason will dispel ignorance and thus destroy the greatest evil - fear , whose source is superstition . A more appropriate ...
... Lucretius is not such a good example ; he does not insist on thinking but on knowing . Knowledge acquired by reason will dispel ignorance and thus destroy the greatest evil - fear , whose source is superstition . A more appropriate ...
Sadržaj
Appearance | 10 |
Mental Activities | 67 |
Contents | 80 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 2
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
absent actually analogy answer Aristotle assumption aware become body called cognition common sense common-sense reasoning concept consciousness context Critique of Judgment Critique of Pure death Descartes dialogue divine Editor's Postface Epictetus eternal everyday evil existence fact faculty frag function Gifford Lectures given Greek Greek philosophy Hannah Arendt Hegel Heidegger Hence Heraclitus human Ibid immortality inherent inner intuition invisible judgment Kant Kant's knowledge language living logos Lucretius manifest matter mental activities metaphor metaphysics mind mind's modern nature never Nicomachean Ethics noein Notes to pages notion object organs Parmenides past and future philosophy Plato present proposition Pure Reason question reality Roman seems seen semblance sensation sense experience sheer Socrates soul speaking spectator speculative speech Theaetetus theory things thinkers thinking activity thinking ego thought thought-things tion trans transcend translation true truth two-in-one visible W. H. Auden Werke withdrawal wonder words world of appearances