Gateway to the Great Books: Philosophical essaysRobert Maynard Hutchins, Mortimer Jerome Adler Encyclopędia Britannica, 1963 - 644 pages Complements Great Books of the Western World; includes only short works and excerpts from longer works. |
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Page 113
... logical reasoning together with some degree of technical skill in manipulating special logical proc- esses , we should decide for the former . Fortunately no such choice has to be made , because there is no opposition between personal ...
... logical reasoning together with some degree of technical skill in manipulating special logical proc- esses , we should decide for the former . Fortunately no such choice has to be made , because there is no opposition between personal ...
Page 235
... logic , and the second leader of the school , Chrysippus , was often referred to simply as The Logician . The Stoics developed in the logic of propositions a branch of logic which Aristotle , the father of logic , had not investigated ...
... logic , and the second leader of the school , Chrysippus , was often referred to simply as The Logician . The Stoics developed in the logic of propositions a branch of logic which Aristotle , the father of logic , had not investigated ...
Page 435
... logical as himself , which hardly suited Omnipotence . He hewed the Church dogmas into shape as though they were ... Logic seemed to require that when the body died and dissolved , after the union which had lasted , at most , only an ...
... logical as himself , which hardly suited Omnipotence . He hewed the Church dogmas into shape as though they were ... Logic seemed to require that when the body died and dissolved , after the union which had lasted , at most , only an ...
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Common terms and phrases
action activity affection appear become beginning believe better body Books bring called cause character Church conception consider course death definite desire direct doubt evidence evil existence experience expression fact faith Faust fear feeling follow force friendship give given hand happen hope human idea imagination important individual intellectual intelligence interest keep kind knowledge least less light live logical look material matter meaning method mind moral nature never object observation old age once particular pass person philosopher play pleasure poet possible practical present problem qualities question reason reflection relation remains result rule seems sense soul speak stand suggested suppose things Thomas thought tion true truth turn understanding universe virtue whole wish