History of Modern Philosophy |
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Page 11
... forces of history : they are based either upon the great problem of the age , upon the highest interests of the human mind , which obscure all others for a time , and drive them into the background , or upon the interests of mere bulk ...
... forces of history : they are based either upon the great problem of the age , upon the highest interests of the human mind , which obscure all others for a time , and drive them into the background , or upon the interests of mere bulk ...
Page 25
... force , i.e. , as energy ; and stuff must be conceived as containing form potentially in itself , as the foundation for , and tendency to , this particular formation , i.e. , as energy ; and every actual thing must be conceived as self ...
... force , i.e. , as energy ; and stuff must be conceived as containing form potentially in itself , as the foundation for , and tendency to , this particular formation , i.e. , as energy ; and every actual thing must be conceived as self ...
Page 38
... forces the λόγοι σπερματικοί . And in the Heraclitian - stoic form , we even meet the word logos . But the Platonic mode of thought forms the real central point of the Grecian logos - idea . The Heraclitian mode of thought involves it ...
... forces the λόγοι σπερματικοί . And in the Heraclitian - stoic form , we even meet the word logos . But the Platonic mode of thought forms the real central point of the Grecian logos - idea . The Heraclitian mode of thought involves it ...
Page 70
... force in things . With Plato , their reality was the world of ideas ; with Aristotle , nature . We have already shown how the second conception necessarily results from the first . Platonic realism prevailed in the scholastic theology ...
... force in things . With Plato , their reality was the world of ideas ; with Aristotle , nature . We have already shown how the second conception necessarily results from the first . Platonic realism prevailed in the scholastic theology ...
Page 94
... . He deifies the State . Such a conception necessarily appeared in the course of the Renaissance . Macchiavelli was filled by it , and he stamped it upon this period with the incomparable force of 94 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY .
... . He deifies the State . Such a conception necessarily appeared in the course of the Renaissance . Macchiavelli was filled by it , and he stamped it upon this period with the incomparable force of 94 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY .
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Common terms and phrases
according activity affirm animal appears Aristotelian Aristotle Arnauld Augustinianism Cartesian cause century certainty Chanut Christian Church clear and distinct cogito ergo sum completely conceived conception consciousness consists culture declared desire divine doctrine of Descartes doubt dualism earth ecclesiastical Egmond error essay existence explained faith false follows France freedom French fundamental Galileo Gröningen human idea impossible independent Jansenists Jesuits knowledge Leibnitz letter Malebranche mathematics matter means Méd Meditations merely Mersenne method Middle Ages mind and body mode of thought modern philosophy motion nature Neo-Platonism Netherlands object ontological argument opposed opposition origin ourselves Paris passions perfect planets Platonic possible principle problem Protestantism Ptolemaic system published queen question reality reason Reformation regarded Regius relation religious Renaissance René Descartes rest Rosicrucians salvation sceptical scholasticism sensations sense soul Spinoza spirit substance theology theory things thinking tion true truth union universal Utrecht Voëtius