The Concept of Freedom |
Contents
INTRODUCTION by Professor George Thomson | 7 |
STUDIES IN A DYING CULTURE | 9 |
D H Lawrence | 11 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
absolute action active affective appears artist beauty become behaviour body bour bourgeois culture bourgeois social relations bourgeois society bourgeoisie causality cells civilisation closed world completely conception consciousness contradiction cortex cortical crisis desires determined dialectical materialism dialectics economic production emotion environment epicritic exist experience fact Fascism feeling forces freedom Freud geois gestalt psychology Hence human ideology illusion individual innervations instincts labour power labour process laws liberty machine man's material matter means mechanism mind monism motion Nature necessity ness neurology neurones Newtonian Newtonian physics organisation organism outer reality particles perception phenomena physicists primitive principle Principle of Relativity productive forces proletariat protopathic psychology qualities regard rela repression result rience scientist sciousness sensation sexual intercourse sexual love simply situation slave-owning social product stimuli teleology thalamus theory things thought tion truth uncon unconscious unfreedom Universe unknowable visual field whole world of physics world-view