A History of Philosophy in Epitome |
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Page ix
... Causes , and the Relation of Form and Matter 120 ( 3. ) Potentiality and Actuality 123 ( 4. ) The Absolute Divine Spirit 124 IV . THE ARISTOTELIAN PHYSICS 2. The Collective Universe 3. Nature 4. Man 127 1. Motion , Matter , Space , and ...
... Causes , and the Relation of Form and Matter 120 ( 3. ) Potentiality and Actuality 123 ( 4. ) The Absolute Divine Spirit 124 IV . THE ARISTOTELIAN PHYSICS 2. The Collective Universe 3. Nature 4. Man 127 1. Motion , Matter , Space , and ...
Page 19
... cause of the becoming , remained the chief interest and the moving spring of philosophical development . The necessity for WHY is every thing 5. Becoming is the unity of being and not - being , and into these two elements is the ...
... cause of the becoming , remained the chief interest and the moving spring of philosophical development . The necessity for WHY is every thing 5. Becoming is the unity of being and not - being , and into these two elements is the ...
Page 38
... cause of their separateness and impenetrability . This is the void space , or more strictly the intervals which are found between the atoms , and which hinder their mutual contact . The atoms , as being and absolute fulness , and the ...
... cause of their separateness and impenetrability . This is the void space , or more strictly the intervals which are found between the atoms , and which hinder their mutual contact . The atoms , as being and absolute fulness , and the ...
Page 39
... causes , or the Anaxagorean teleology . Consequent upon this , we find as the prominent characteristic of the later Atomistic school ( Diagoras the Melier ) , polemics against the gods of the people , and a con- stantly more publicly ...
... causes , or the Anaxagorean teleology . Consequent upon this , we find as the prominent characteristic of the later Atomistic school ( Diagoras the Melier ) , polemics against the gods of the people , and a con- stantly more publicly ...
Page 42
... cause of motion , to which also might be attributed the capacity to work designedly , which had led him to the idea of an immaterial principle . His voûs , therefore , is almost nothing but a mover of matter , and in this function ...
... cause of motion , to which also might be attributed the capacity to work designedly , which had led him to the idea of an immaterial principle . His voûs , therefore , is almost nothing but a mover of matter , and in this function ...
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A History of Philosophy in Epitome Albert I. E. Friedrich Karl Al Schwegler No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
absolute abstract according activity actual affirmed Anaxagoras appears apprehended apriori Aristotelian Aristotle atheism attempt become body Boehme cause character conceived conception connection consciousness contradiction Critick Descartes determined dialectic divine doctrine of ideas Eleatic elements Empedocles empirical empiricism Epicurus essence ethics existence external faculty farther Fichte finite fundamental ground happiness Hegel Hence Heraclitus highest human ideal individual infinite inner intuition Jacob Boehme Jacobi judgment Kant knowledge Leibnitz logical matter metaphysics mind monads moral motion nature non-Ego not-being object opposition original Parmenides perfect phenomenal philoso Plato pleasure Plotinus positive practical principle Protagoras pure Pythagorean rational rational psychology reality reason relation religion representation respect Scepticism Schelling Scholasticism sensation sense sensuous side simple Socrates Sophistic philosophy soul Spinoza spirit standpoint Stoics subjective idealism substance theoretical theory thing thinking thought tion transcendental true truth understanding unity universal virtue whole wholly Xenophon
Popular passages
Page 5 - Whoever misses reading this book will miss reading what is, in various respects, to the best of our judgment and experience, the most remarkable book of the day — one, indeed, that no thoughtful, inquiring mind would miss reading for a good deal. Let the reader be as adverse as he may be to the writer's philosophy, let him be as devoted to the obstructive as Mr.
Page 5 - ... let him, in short, find his prejudices shocked, at every turn of the argument, and all his prepossessions whistled down the wind — still there is so much in this extraordinary volume to stimulate reflection, and excite to inquiry, and provoke to earnest investigation, perhaps (to this or that reader) on a track hitherto untrodden, and across the virgin soil of unfilled fields, fresh woods and pastures new— that we may fairly defy the most hostile spirit, the most mistrustful and least sympathetic,...
Page 5 - Let the reader be as adverse as he may be to the writer's philosophy, let him be as devoted to the obstructive as Mr. Buckle is to the progress party, let him be as orthodox in church creed as the other is heterodox, as dogmatic as the author is skeptical— let him, in short, find his prejudices shocked at every turn of the argument, and all his prepossessions whistled down the wind — still, there is so...
Page v - Schwegler's History of Philosophy is found in the hands of almost every student in the philosophical department of a German University, and is highly esteemed for its clearness, conciseness, and comprehensiveness. The present translation was undertaken with the conviction that the work would not lose its interest or its value in an English dress, and with the hope that it might be of wider service in such a form to students of philosophy here.
Page 331 - Schelling finds the following meaning, viz. : that the eternal Son of God, born of the essence of the Father of all things, is the finite itself, as it exists in the eternal intuition of God...
Page 5 - When we enter on a more searching criticism of the two writers, it must be admitted that Merivale has as firm a grasp of his subject as Gibbon, and that his work is characterized by a greater freedom from prejudice, and a sounder philosophy.
Page vi - Philosophy is found in the hands of almost every student in the philosophical department of a German University, and is highly esteemed for its clearness, conciseness, and comprehensiveness. The present translation was undertaken with the conviction that the work would not lose its interest or its value in an English dress, and with the hope that it might be of wider service in such a form to students of philosophy here. It was thought especially that a proper translation of this manual would supply...