Great Books of the Western World, Band 12Robert Maynard Hutchins Encyclopædia Britannica, 1952 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 55
Seite 50
... true and that the senses cannot be refuted . For that which is of itself to be able to refute things false by true things must from the nature of the case be proved to have the higher certainty . Well then what must fairly be accounted ...
... true and that the senses cannot be refuted . For that which is of itself to be able to refute things false by true things must from the nature of the case be proved to have the higher certainty . Well then what must fairly be accounted ...
Seite 133
... true . It is not possible then to assent to that which appears not to be true . Why ? Because this is the na- ture of the understanding , to incline to the true , to be dissatisfied with the false , and in matters uncertain to withhold ...
... true . It is not possible then to assent to that which appears not to be true . Why ? Because this is the na- ture of the understanding , to incline to the true , to be dissatisfied with the false , and in matters uncertain to withhold ...
Seite 162
... true athlete , the man who exer- cises himself against such appearances . Stay , wretch , do not be carried away . Great is the combat , divine is the work ; it is for kingship , for freedom , for happiness , for freedom from ...
... true athlete , the man who exer- cises himself against such appearances . Stay , wretch , do not be carried away . Great is the combat , divine is the work ; it is for kingship , for freedom , for happiness , for freedom from ...
Inhalt
On the Nature of Things Page | 1 |
The Discourses of Epictetus Page | 105 |
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius Page | 253 |
Urheberrecht | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
able Agamemnon animal Antisthenes Antoninus Pius appearances beautiful belongs blame born Cæsar cause CHAPTER choose Chrysippus clouds colour consider contrary Crito death desire divine earth Epictetus Epicurus ether Euripides everything evil exist eyes faculty fall father fear fire first-beginnings of things force formed give gods Gyara Hadrian hand haply happen harm hear heat heaven hinder idols Iliad kind labour light limbs live look LUCRETIUS man's Marcus Aurelius matter means mind mortal motion move never opinion pain palæstra pass perceive person philosopher Plato pleasure possess praise precognitions produced rational rational animal reason Rome seeds seek sense slave sleep Socrates sophism soul speak suppose syllogisms tell thee thou art thou hast thou wilt thyself tion truth ture turn tyrant universe void whole wild beasts winds wish words wretched Zeus