History of the Problems of Philosophy, Volume 2Macmillan, 1902 - Philosophy |
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Page 5
... word in that sense , when they denounce as contrary to nature the former the difference made by the laws between the freeman and the slave , the latter the distinction drawn by prejudice between the different classes of citizens . Thus ...
... word in that sense , when they denounce as contrary to nature the former the difference made by the laws between the freeman and the slave , the latter the distinction drawn by prejudice between the different classes of citizens . Thus ...
Page 7
... word , wherever there is a good action to be done or good counsel needed , there Socrates is always to be found . In the process of giving moral advice Socrates , incidentally- if one may so express it - arrived at certain truths ...
... word , wherever there is a good action to be done or good counsel needed , there Socrates is always to be found . In the process of giving moral advice Socrates , incidentally- if one may so express it - arrived at certain truths ...
Page 8
... word formed in his mind a coherent system . Socrates has rightly been called the founder of Moral Science , for all his logical precepts ( his yvw0i σeautóv , irony , maieutic , etc. ) have significance only when applied to practical ...
... word formed in his mind a coherent system . Socrates has rightly been called the founder of Moral Science , for all his logical precepts ( his yvw0i σeautóv , irony , maieutic , etc. ) have significance only when applied to practical ...
Page 14
... word with mind . Moreover , we make a distinction between pleasures that are real and pleasures that are false , and as the mind is the only judge of truth , pleasure from this point of view also , depends on knowledge . Thus pleasure ...
... word with mind . Moreover , we make a distinction between pleasures that are real and pleasures that are false , and as the mind is the only judge of truth , pleasure from this point of view also , depends on knowledge . Thus pleasure ...
Page 20
... word , everything that would justify the highest ambition . . The fact that Aristotle makes a virtue of political ... words : " Neither evening nor morning star is so lovely " ( Nic . Ethics , V , 1 ) . He adds that , according to the ...
... word , everything that would justify the highest ambition . . The fact that Aristotle makes a virtue of political ... words : " Neither evening nor morning star is so lovely " ( Nic . Ethics , V , 1 ) . He adds that , according to the ...
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absolute according action Anaxagoras animal appears argument Aristotle attributes becomes body Carneades cause certainty conceive conception consciousness consequently contradiction created creatures criterion Democritus Descartes determined distinct divine doctrine doubt elements Epicureans Epicurus essence eternal Ethics everything evil existence existence of God extension fact faith feeling finite force happiness harmony Heraclitus Herbert Spencer human Ibid idea ideal immortality individual infinite intelligence intuition Kant kind knowledge laws Leibnitz Lucretius Malebranche material matter merely metaphysical mind modes monad moral motion nature necessary Non-being object Pantheism passions perceptions perfect Phaedo phenomena philosophy Plato pleasure Plotinus possess possible principle priori proof proved pure Pyrrho rational reality reason regard relation religion scepticism sensation sense sensible Sextus Empiricus Socrates soul Spinoza spirit Stoics substance supreme theodicy theology theory things thought tion true truth union unity universal virtue whole wisdom words καὶ τὸ