History of Modern Philosophy |
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Page 2
... become clear as to the historical con- ditions from which modern philosophy proceeds , and as to the connection of its first period with the great march of human development . In the very concept of the history of philosophy , certain ...
... become clear as to the historical con- ditions from which modern philosophy proceeds , and as to the connection of its first period with the great march of human development . In the very concept of the history of philosophy , certain ...
Page 5
... become gradually conscious of them : we should pass from the twilight to the noonday of knowledge , in a succession of experiences which would be equivalent to a history of our conscious- ness . And , if true conceptions are not innate ...
... become gradually conscious of them : we should pass from the twilight to the noonday of knowledge , in a succession of experiences which would be equivalent to a history of our conscious- ness . And , if true conceptions are not innate ...
Page 11
... become a phenomenon . We cease to be what we have been : we rise above our past self , like an artist above his work . The artist absorbed in labor sees with different eyes from the artist who has put down his tools , and stepped back ...
... become a phenomenon . We cease to be what we have been : we rise above our past self , like an artist above his work . The artist absorbed in labor sees with different eyes from the artist who has put down his tools , and stepped back ...
Page 12
... become our object ; we cease to feel them as soon as we begin to reflect upon them . Therein lies the whole significance of the knowl- edge of self ; the crisis which it effects in our lives . It transforms our state into our object ...
... become our object ; we cease to feel them as soon as we begin to reflect upon them . Therein lies the whole significance of the knowl- edge of self ; the crisis which it effects in our lives . It transforms our state into our object ...
Page 13
... become conscious of a passionate desire to become acquainted with philosophy , and receive from it the satisfaction that life no longer gives . What those significant meditations upon self are in the life of the individual , the ...
... become conscious of a passionate desire to become acquainted with philosophy , and receive from it the satisfaction that life no longer gives . What those significant meditations upon self are in the life of the individual , the ...
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Common terms and phrases
according activity affirm animal appears Aristotle Arnauld Augustinian authority bodily Cartesian cause certainty chap Christian Church clear and distinct clearly and distinctly cogito ergo sum completely conceived conception consciousness consists Crown 8vo declared deny desire divine doctrine of Descartes doubt dualism earth ecclesiastical Epicureans error evident existence explained extension fact faith false follows freedom fundamental Galileo Gassendi Greek philosophy Gröningen human idea impossible independent inference Jansenists Jesuits knowledge Malebranche material world matter means Méd merely method mind and body mode of thought Molière motion move nature Neo-Platonism Netherlands object ontological argument opposed opposition origin original sin ourselves Paris passions Paternoster Square perfect philosophy planets Platonic possible principle problem proof Protestantism question reality reason Reformation regarded relation religious Renaissance rest salvation scholasticism secs self-delusion sensations sense soul and body Spinoza spirit substance theology theory things thinking tion transubstantiation true truth union universal Voëtius
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Page 593 - By the Hon. MARGARET COLLIER (Madame Galletti di Cadilhac), Author of
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Page 99 - How each the Whole its substance gives, Each in the other works and lives! Like heavenly forces rising and descending, Their golden urns reciprocally lending, With wings that winnow blessing From Heaven through Earth I see them pressing, Filling the All with harmony unceasing!