A History of Philosophy |
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Page 150
... particular sensible object “ reminds " us . Particular Objects and Universal Ideas . There was , however , an- other difficulty not so intimately connected with knowledge , but still quite closely related . We recognized the Form in the ...
... particular sensible object “ reminds " us . Particular Objects and Universal Ideas . There was , however , an- other difficulty not so intimately connected with knowledge , but still quite closely related . We recognized the Form in the ...
Page 176
... particular things , it really is separable from them for the purposes of thought and knowl- edge . We can abstract ... Particular . Again , the Platonic Idea , though it had no existence outside of the particular , was a very vital and ...
... particular things , it really is separable from them for the purposes of thought and knowl- edge . We can abstract ... Particular . Again , the Platonic Idea , though it had no existence outside of the particular , was a very vital and ...
Page 82
... particular body , and being associated with no particular part , it feels none of the passions , interests , prejudices and personal loves and hates that reflect the contact , the conflict , and the modification of a particular human ...
... particular body , and being associated with no particular part , it feels none of the passions , interests , prejudices and personal loves and hates that reflect the contact , the conflict , and the modification of a particular human ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE RELIGIOUS AND ETHICAL BACKGROUND OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY | 17 |
THE MILESIAN SCHOOL | 26 |
Copyright | |
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absolute activity actual Anaxagoras Anaximander Aristotle beauty become behavior believe body Burnet Carneades causation cause character Christian conceived concept consciousness created Cyrenaics Democritus Descartes divine doctrine earth Eleatic Empedocles Epicureans Epicurus essence esthetic ethics evil existence experience expression external world feeling Fichte final finite freedom Greek happiness Hegel Hence Heraclitus human ideal ideas immortality individual infinite intellect intelligible Kant knowledge Leucippus living logical mathematical matter means metaphysical mind Monads moral motion movement nature Neo-Platonic objects organic pantheism Parmenides particular perceive perceptions phenomena philosophy physical Plato pleasure Plotinus political possible principle pure qualities rational Reality reason regarded relations religion religious Roscellinus scientific sensation sense sensible world skepticism social Socrates soul space Spinoza spirit Stoic Stoicism substance teaching theology theory things things-in-themselves thinking thought tion true truth universe Unmoved Mover virtue whole world-process world-stuff