Simone Weil: "The Just Balance"Cambridge University Press, 1989 M03 31 - 234 páginas This book examines the religious, social, and political thought of Simone Weil in the context of the rigorous philosophical thinking out of which it grew. It also explores illuminating parallels between these ideas and ideas that were simultaneously being developed by Ludwig Wittgenstein. Simone Weil developed a conception of the relation between human beings and nature which made it difficult for her to explain mutual understanding and justice. Her wrestling with this difficulty coincided with a considerable sharpening of her religious sensibility, and led to a new concept of the natural and social orders involving a supernatural dimension, within which the concepts of beauty and justice are paramount. Professor Winch provides a fresh perspective on the complete span of Simone Weil's work, and discusses the fundamental difficulties of tracing the dividing line between philosophy and religion. |
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... course of lectures on Simone Weil in 1983 and 1984 ; I agreed to this at first rather reluctantly , as I felt that the issues to which I had once felt close had slipped away from me . But discussion with the students brought things ...
... course of lectures on Simone Weil in 1983 and 1984 ; I agreed to this at first rather reluctantly , as I felt that the issues to which I had once felt close had slipped away from me . But discussion with the students brought things ...
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... course of studying the work of any thinker of a radically innovative kind . Innovation in the intellectual , and especially in the philosophical , realm more 1 often than not takes the form precisely of pressing questions 1: Introduction.
... course of studying the work of any thinker of a radically innovative kind . Innovation in the intellectual , and especially in the philosophical , realm more 1 often than not takes the form precisely of pressing questions 1: Introduction.
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... course of the book are Spinoza and , much more extensively , Wittgenstein . The role of Spinoza in my discussion needs little explanation ; Simone Weil had thought deeply about his philosophy and she is at times clearly directly ...
... course of the book are Spinoza and , much more extensively , Wittgenstein . The role of Spinoza in my discussion needs little explanation ; Simone Weil had thought deeply about his philosophy and she is at times clearly directly ...
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Contenido
The Cartesian background | 5 |
The sensations of the present moment | 18 |
La simple perception de la nature est une sorte de danse | 32 |
Language | 48 |
Necessity | 60 |
Equilibrium | 77 |
Completely free action | 90 |
The power to refuse | 102 |
Geometry | 133 |
Incommensurability | 147 |
Beauty | 164 |
Justice | 179 |
A supernatural virtue? | 191 |
Notes | 212 |
Bibliography | 228 |
231 | |
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