The Study of PhilosophyCollegiate Press, 1987 - 340 pages |
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Page 33
... doubt could have been expected to respond kindly to this appeal to their better selves , if indeed they were not angered by it . So there were reasons enough for his own growing personal unpop- ularity with many of his fellow citizens ...
... doubt could have been expected to respond kindly to this appeal to their better selves , if indeed they were not angered by it . So there were reasons enough for his own growing personal unpop- ularity with many of his fellow citizens ...
Page 248
... doubts concerning the possibility of knowledge . For so long as we suppose that there is a physical reality which ... doubt . But once we realize that the things we per- ceive are real and that these things exist in the mind , then we ...
... doubts concerning the possibility of knowledge . For so long as we suppose that there is a physical reality which ... doubt . But once we realize that the things we per- ceive are real and that these things exist in the mind , then we ...
Page 322
... doubt , for example , that there is in tragedy a certain inevitability ( Aristotle ) of process , some kind of ... doubts of Hamlet , and the madness of Lear . In the drama there is always an attempt to account for human misery and the ...
... doubt , for example , that there is in tragedy a certain inevitability ( Aristotle ) of process , some kind of ... doubts of Hamlet , and the madness of Lear . In the drama there is always an attempt to account for human misery and the ...
Contents
It began here | 11 |
And so I go about the world | 29 |
part II | 65 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieve action Aldonza Amphiboly analogy answer appear argued argument Argumentum Argumentum ad Baculum Argumentum ad Ignorantiam Argumentum ad Populum Aristotle Aristotle's become believe Bentham Bertrand Russell Bruno called causal cause concerned consider course Critique Crito death Descartes doubt drama empiricism ethics Euthyphro example existence experience expression fact fallacy feel Freud Giordano Bruno Greek happiness Hegel human suffering Hume ideas intellectual scheme judgments Kant Kant's kind knowledge language Leibniz live logical Ludwig Wittgenstein matter mean Meletus merely metaphysics mind moral nature objects obviously ourselves perhaps person Philosophical Investigations philosophy picture Plato pleasure possible principle priori problem propositions psychological hedonism question Quixote rational reality reason regarded remark replies result seems sense simply Socrates soul Spinoza substance tell tend theory things thought tion tragedy tragic true truth understand universe Wittgenstein words wrong York