Great Treasury of Western Thought: A Compendium of Important Statements on Man and His Institutions by the Great Thinkers in Western HistoryMortimer Jerome Adler, Charles Lincoln Van Doren Bowker, 1977 - Počet stran: 1771 Passages from the West's great written works, ranging from the Odyssey and the Old Testament to the Interpretation of Dreams and Ulysses, comment on love, knowledge, ethics, war, art, and other abiding topics. |
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Strana 6
... animal . Aristotle , History of Animals , 523a15 14 In the great majority of animals there are traces of psychical qualities or attitudes , which qualities are more markedly differentiated in the case of human beings . For just as we ...
... animal . Aristotle , History of Animals , 523a15 14 In the great majority of animals there are traces of psychical qualities or attitudes , which qualities are more markedly differentiated in the case of human beings . For just as we ...
Strana 7
... animals , and the most full of lust and gluttony . Aristotle , Politics , 1253a31 23 If nature makes nothing incomplete , and nothing in vain , the inference must be that she has made all animals for the sake of man . Aristotle ...
... animals , and the most full of lust and gluttony . Aristotle , Politics , 1253a31 23 If nature makes nothing incomplete , and nothing in vain , the inference must be that she has made all animals for the sake of man . Aristotle ...
Strana 9
... animals ; but his bodily form , erect and looking heavenwards , admonishes him to mind the things that are above . Augustine , City of God , XXII , 24 39 The saying that man and animals have a like be- ginning in generation is true of ...
... animals ; but his bodily form , erect and looking heavenwards , admonishes him to mind the things that are above . Augustine , City of God , XXII , 24 39 The saying that man and animals have a like be- ginning in generation is true of ...
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action animals Aquinas Aristotle Augustine believe body Boswell called Canterbury Tales cause Cicero Concerning Human Understanding Copyright death delight Descartes desire Don Quixote doth doubt dreams earth Epictetus Essays Ethics Euripides evil existence experience eyes fact faith false father fear feel Freud friends friendship Gargantua and Pantagruel give glory hand happy hate hath heart heaven honour ideas imagination intellect Johnson kind knowledge language learned live Lord man's marriage matter means memory mind Montaigne moral nature never object opinion ourselves pain passions perceive person philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch principle Raymond Sebond reason Reprinted by permission sense sexual Shakespeare Socrates soul speak Summa Theologica T. H. Huxley thee things thou thought tion Tom Jones Troilus and Cressida true truth universal unto virtue wife woman women words youth