The Life of the Mind: ThinkingHarcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1978 - Broj stranica: 258 Includes chapters on Plato, Socrates, Thomas Aquinas, and Nietzsche. |
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Stranica 57
... means to their end are indeed the most refined modes of common - sense reasoning . The ac- tivity of knowing is no ... means the case with meaning and with the faculty of thought , which searches for it ; the latter does not ask what ...
... means to their end are indeed the most refined modes of common - sense reasoning . The ac- tivity of knowing is no ... means the case with meaning and with the faculty of thought , which searches for it ; the latter does not ask what ...
Stranica 63
... means to reach intuition " ( " In whatever manner and by whatever means a cognition may relate to objects , intuition is that through which it is in immediate relation to them , and to which all thought is directed as a means " ) 82_ ...
... means to reach intuition " ( " In whatever manner and by whatever means a cognition may relate to objects , intuition is that through which it is in immediate relation to them , and to which all thought is directed as a means " ) 82_ ...
Stranica 118
... means of reaching intuition . " 110 And here is Heidegger : " The dialegesthai has in itself a tendency towards a noein , a seeing .... It lacks the proper means of theōrein itself .... This is the basic meaning of Plato's dialectic ...
... means of reaching intuition . " 110 And here is Heidegger : " The dialegesthai has in itself a tendency towards a noein , a seeing .... It lacks the proper means of theōrein itself .... This is the basic meaning of Plato's dialectic ...
Sadržaj
Appearance | 10 |
Mental Activities | 67 |
Contents | 80 |
Autorska prava | |
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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