Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
1040 FRIEDRICHNIETZSCHE bas-reliefs. The perfection of these dream scenes might almost tempt us to consider the dreaming Greek a ...
632 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: Right. PHILONOUS: Is the nearest and exactest survey made by the help of a microscope, or by the naked ...
THEBIRTH OFTRAGEDY 1041 Dionysiac forces subdued them. Doric art has immortalized Apollo’s majestic rejection of all license. Bu ...
THREEDIALOGUES(1) 633 happens upon viewing an object in various degrees of light. And what is more known than that the same bodi ...
1042 FRIEDRICHNIETZSCHE III. In order to comprehend this we must take down the elaborate edifice of Apollonian culture stone by ...
634 GEORGEBERKELEY HYLAS: I frankly own, Philonous, that it is in vain to stand out any longer. Colours, sounds, tastes, in a wo ...
THEGAYSCIENCE 1043 to die at all. Such laments as arise now arise over short-lived Achilles, over the generations ephemeral as l ...
THREEDIALOGUES(1) 635 PHILONOUS: Again, have you not acknowledged that no real inherent property of any object can be changed wi ...
1044 FRIEDRICHNIETZSCHE But hours will come when you will realize that it is infinite and that there is nothing more awesome tha ...
636 GEORGEBERKELEY motions perceived are both really in the object) it is possible one and the same body shall be really moved t ...
TWILIGHT OF THEIDOLS 1045 TWILIGHT OF THE IDOLS (selections) THEPROBLEM OFSOCRATES [1] Concerning life, the wisest men of all ag ...
THREEDIALOGUES(1) 637 HYLAS: I think so. PHILONOUS: These qualities, therefore, stripped of all sensible properties, are without ...
1046 FRIEDRICHNIETZSCHE [4] Socrates’ decadence is suggested not only by the admitted wantonness and anarchy of his instincts, b ...
638 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: Since therefore it is impossible even for the mind to disunite the ideas of extension and motion f ...
TWILIGHT OF THEIDOLS 1047 extreme case; his awe-inspiring ugliness proclaimed him as such to all who could see; he fascinated, o ...
THREEDIALOGUES(1) 639 HYLAS:True. PHILONOUS: And this action cannot exist in, or belong to, any unthinking thing; but, whatever ...
1048 FRIEDRICHNIETZSCHE “We have found him,” they cry ecstatically; “it is the senses! These senses, which are so immoral in oth ...
640 GEORGEBERKELEY PHILONOUS: Besides, since you distinguish the activeand passivein every percep- tion, you must do it in that ...
TWILIGHT OF THEIDOLS 1049 the prejudice of reason forces us to posit unity, identity, permanence, substance, cause, thinghood, b ...
THREEDIALOGUES(1) 641 HYLAS: Aye but, Philonous, you take me wrong. I do not mean that matter is spreadin a gross literal sense ...
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