The Conduct of LifeSecker & Warburg, 1952 - 342 pages |
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Page 71
... creature capable of condemning human beings to an eternity of torture for sins committed in the briefest of lifetimes : a ... creatures to invent the insane horrors of Buchenwald and Auschwitz ? Neither faith nor reason could bring such ...
... creature capable of condemning human beings to an eternity of torture for sins committed in the briefest of lifetimes : a ... creatures to invent the insane horrors of Buchenwald and Auschwitz ? Neither faith nor reason could bring such ...
Page 98
... creatures into clerks and bookkeepers , into physicians and inventors , into farm laborers and mechanics : creatures adapted to many roles of a most exacting kind , not found in nature or in primitive societies . The creation of such ...
... creatures into clerks and bookkeepers , into physicians and inventors , into farm laborers and mechanics : creatures adapted to many roles of a most exacting kind , not found in nature or in primitive societies . The creation of such ...
Page 128
... creatures : even their most passive responses are still determined by general goals derived from their organic plan of life : they actively reach out for one kind of good and reject another . Some of the selections that the organism ...
... creatures : even their most passive responses are still determined by general goals derived from their organic plan of life : they actively reach out for one kind of good and reject another . Some of the selections that the organism ...
Table des matières
THE CHALLENGE TO RENEWAL | 3 |
COSMOS AND PERSON | 58 |
THE TRANSFORMATIONS OF | 92 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
achieved action activities animal become biological type body bring Buddhism capable capacity century Christian civilization concept consciousness cosmic create creative creatures culture death detachment dionysian discipline disintegration divine doctrine dominant drama dream dynamic dynamic equilibrium effect effort elements emergence essential ethics evil existence experience external fact forces functions further goal growth habits Herman Melville higher Hindu Hinduism human personality ideal impulses inner insight interpretation invention isolationism lack life's living man's Marxism means mechanical ment merely mind modern moral nature once one's organic original Patrick Geddes pattern perhaps philosophy physical Plato possible practice present present philosophy produce promethean psychodrama purpose religion renewal response role romanticism Schweitzer seek self-fabricating sense single Singular Points social society Socrates spiritual super-ego symbols teleology tion Toynbee transformation unity universal values whole world government York