Great Treasury of Western Thought: A Compendium of Important Statements on Man and His Institutions by the Great Thinkers in Western HistoryMortimer Jerome Adler, Charles Lincoln Van Doren Bowker, 1977 - 1771 páginas Passages from the West's great written works, ranging from the Odyssey and the Old Testament to the Interpretation of Dreams and Ulysses, comment on love, knowledge, ethics, war, art, and other abiding topics. |
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Página 1069
... nature regarded after the analogy of art . Hence it gives a veritable extension , not , of course , to our knowledge of objects of nature , but to our concep- tion of nature itself - nature as mere mechanism being enlarged to the ...
... nature regarded after the analogy of art . Hence it gives a veritable extension , not , of course , to our knowledge of objects of nature , but to our concep- tion of nature itself - nature as mere mechanism being enlarged to the ...
Página 1170
... Nature and the Natural We should be inclined to believe that the horse had. Of all the terms in the vocabulary of specu- lative thought , the words " nature " and " natural " have , perhaps , the greatest ambiguity . The passages ...
... Nature and the Natural We should be inclined to believe that the horse had. Of all the terms in the vocabulary of specu- lative thought , the words " nature " and " natural " have , perhaps , the greatest ambiguity . The passages ...
Página 1179
... nature does nothing for the sake of an end , for that eternal and infinite Being whom we call God or Nature acts by the same necessity by which He exists ; for . . . He acts by the same necessity of nature ... Nature and the Natural | 1179.
... nature does nothing for the sake of an end , for that eternal and infinite Being whom we call God or Nature acts by the same necessity by which He exists ; for . . . He acts by the same necessity of nature ... Nature and the Natural | 1179.
Términos y frases comunes
action animals Aquinas Aristotle Augustine believe body Boswell called Canterbury Tales cause Cicero Concerning Human Understanding Copyright death delight Descartes desire Don Quixote doth doubt dreams earth Epictetus Essays Ethics Euripides evil existence experience eyes fact faith false father fear feel Freud friends friendship Gargantua and Pantagruel give glory hand happy hate hath heart heaven honour ideas imagination intellect Johnson kind knowledge language learned live Lord man's marriage matter means memory mind Montaigne moral nature never object opinion ourselves pain passions perceive person philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch principle Raymond Sebond reason Reprinted by permission sense sexual Shakespeare Socrates soul speak Summa Theologica T. H. Huxley thee things thou thought tion Tom Jones Troilus and Cressida true truth universal unto virtue wife woman women words youth
Referencias a este libro
Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science: Volume 44 - Supplement 9 ... Allen Kent,Harold Lancour,Jay E. Daily Vista previa limitada - 1989 |