The Study of PhilosophyCollegiate Press, 1987 - 340 pages |
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Page 296
... effect of certain analogies " ( Blue Book , p . 28 ) . " The man who is philosophically puzzled sees a law in the way a word is used , and , trying to apply this law consistently , comes up against cases where it leads to paradoxical ...
... effect of certain analogies " ( Blue Book , p . 28 ) . " The man who is philosophically puzzled sees a law in the way a word is used , and , trying to apply this law consistently , comes up against cases where it leads to paradoxical ...
Page 320
... effect the lesser movement would ordinarily have upon us . This , and not the fictional nature of dramatic productions , is the principle of softening that takes the edge off the pain to which the representation of the melancholy scenes ...
... effect the lesser movement would ordinarily have upon us . This , and not the fictional nature of dramatic productions , is the principle of softening that takes the edge off the pain to which the representation of the melancholy scenes ...
Page 327
... effect , their inordinate response . In its attempts to make intelligible this effect in this way , the tragic drama is doomed to failure , for in matters of this kind to explain the cause is not to account for the effect . And this ...
... effect , their inordinate response . In its attempts to make intelligible this effect in this way , the tragic drama is doomed to failure , for in matters of this kind to explain the cause is not to account for the effect . And this ...
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