The Conduct of LifeHarcourt, Brace, 1951 - 342 pages Discusses the ultimate ethical and religious issues that confront modern man and offers a new orientation, directed to the renewal of life and the reintegration of modern civilization. |
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Page 10
... beginning of an age of cultural cross - fertilization , the meeting of the East and the West , the North and the South : the first true age of man . Even the most primitive of such interchanges has already had immense results on human ...
... beginning of an age of cultural cross - fertilization , the meeting of the East and the West , the North and the South : the first true age of man . Even the most primitive of such interchanges has already had immense results on human ...
Page 70
... beginning or the end : we have looked for an enclosed system with a single cause at the beginning , a single consummation at the end . But the tendency toward organization , development , life , personality does not in fact become ...
... beginning or the end : we have looked for an enclosed system with a single cause at the beginning , a single consummation at the end . But the tendency toward organization , development , life , personality does not in fact become ...
Page 131
... beginning no rigidly pre - ordained route is not the same as to say that one has no provisional destination . At the time Spinoza uttered this judgment there was , indeed , good ground for his taking that position ; for the scholastic ...
... beginning no rigidly pre - ordained route is not the same as to say that one has no provisional destination . At the time Spinoza uttered this judgment there was , indeed , good ground for his taking that position ; for the scholastic ...
Table des matières
THE CHALLENGE TO RENEWAL | 3 |
The Nature of Man 223 | 22 |
COSMOS AND PERSON | 58 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
achieved action activities animal balance become biological biological type bring Buddhism capable capacity century Christian civilization concept consciousness cosmic create creative creature culture death detachment dionysian discipline disintegration divine doctrine dominant drama dream dynamic equilibrium effort elements emergence energy environment essential ethical evil existence experience external fact forces functions further goal growth habits Herman Melville higher Hindu Hinduism human personality ical ideal impulses inner insight interpretation invention isolationism 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 potentialities practice present present philosophy primitive produce psychodrama purpose rational religion religious renewal response role romanticism sacrifice Schweitzer seek self-fabrication sense single Singular Points social society Socrates spirit super-ego survival symbols teleology tion totalitarian Toynbee transformation universal values whole York