Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
112 PLATO “What was it?” “We were saying something to the effect that getting the most beautiful possible look at these things w ...
they are able to will contrary to what they feel. Now one can easily dispel these misconcep- tions if one attends to the nature ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVI) 113 “And, my friend, that the ones who believe the latter can’t specify what sort of intelligence, but are forc ...
already has, so as to encompass these same infinite entities, but not a more universal idea of entity. For we have shown that th ...
114 PLATO without insight seem to you to be any different from blind people who travel along the right road?” “No different,” he ...
522 BARUCHSPINOZA I reply that I do not know, just as I do not know how one should reckon a man who hangs himself, or how one sh ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVI) 115 “And I don’t imagine,” I said, “that there are many others either, not to say none, that have any additiona ...
523 John Locke was born in Wrington, Somerset, the son of a Puritan lawyer. His father fought on the side of the Parliament agai ...
116 PLATO darkness, something that comes into and passes out of being, it deals in seeming and grows dim, changing its opinions ...
524 JOHNLOCKE Following his return to England, Locke published his two most important works,Essay Concerning Human Understanding ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVI) 117 “I’m putting them,” he said. “And would you also be willing to claim,” I said, “that it’s divided with resp ...
INTRODUCTION 525 The best commentary on Locke’s thought in general and on the Essayin particu- lar is Richard I. Aaron,John Loc ...
118 PLATO e 511a b c d e “I do know that very well,” he said. “Then you also know that they make additional use of visible forms ...
526 JOHNLOCKE AN ESSAY CONCERNING HUMAN UNDERSTANDING (abridged) INTRODUCTION An enquiry into the understanding, pleasant and u ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVII) 119 514a b c 515a b c d BOOKVII “Next,” I said, “make an image of our nature as it involves education and the ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(I, 1) 527 truth yet we have no certain knowledge. And here we shall have occasion to examine ...
120 D Forms Knowledge /Active Insight C Mathematical Objects DiscursiveThinking Intelligible World B Visible Things Belief /Trus ...
528 JOHNLOCKE first beings and which they bring into the world with them, as necessarily and really as they do any of their inhe ...
REPUBLIC(BOOKVII) 121 e 516a b c d e 517a “And if one forced him to look at the light itself, wouldn’t he have pain in his eyes ...
ANESSAYCONCERNINGHUMANUNDERSTANDING(II, 1) 529 BOOKII. OFIDEAS CHAPTER1. OFIDEAS INGENERAL ANDTHEIRORIGINAL Idea is the object ...
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