The Idea of HistoryClarendon Press, 1948 - 339 Seiten |
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Seite 82
... human nature had existed ever since the creation of the world exactly as it existed among themselves . Human nature was conceived substantialistically as something static and permanent , an unvarying substratum underlying the course of ...
... human nature had existed ever since the creation of the world exactly as it existed among themselves . Human nature was conceived substantialistically as something static and permanent , an unvarying substratum underlying the course of ...
Seite 84
... human understanding we are coming to improve our own understanding . Hence the historical development of the science of human nature entails an historical development in human nature itself . This was concealed from eighteenth - century ...
... human understanding we are coming to improve our own understanding . Hence the historical development of the science of human nature entails an historical development in human nature itself . This was concealed from eighteenth - century ...
Seite 85
Robin George Collingwood Thomas Malcolm Knox. human nature , the human nature actually existing in eighteenth- century Europe , as the product of an historical process , whereas it was regarded as the unchanging presupposition of any ...
Robin George Collingwood Thomas Malcolm Knox. human nature , the human nature actually existing in eighteenth- century Europe , as the product of an historical process , whereas it was regarded as the unchanging presupposition of any ...
Inhalt
The Philosophy of History | 1 |
Historys Nature Object Method and Value | 7 |
The Problem of Parts IIV | 10 |
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able accepted according actions activity actually already answer attempt authorities become begins believe called century certain character civilization claim conceived conception consciousness Consequently consists construction critical depends described discover distinction doctrine elements evidence example existence experience expressed fact feeling follows give given Greek happened Hegel historian historical knowledge historical process historical thought human human nature idea imagination immediate implies important individual interest Kant kind known laws less living logical look means mere merely method mind moral namely natural science never object organized particular past period person philosophy point of view political position possible present principle problem progress question rational reality reason reflective regarded relation result scientific sense society spirit statements theory things thinking tion true truth understand universal whole