The Condition of ManHarcourt, Brace & World, 1944 - 467 pages |
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Page 18
... took possession of a world in decay . The Jews had reached their high point in culture and religion by the end of the sixth century : their supreme figure was the prophet Isaiah . From that point on the voice of the prophets was under ...
... took possession of a world in decay . The Jews had reached their high point in culture and religion by the end of the sixth century : their supreme figure was the prophet Isaiah . From that point on the voice of the prophets was under ...
Page 103
... took place : a hundred different legal codes came to compete with each other : tribal codes that had never been subject to rigorous philosophic appraisal , to experimental probation , to the refinement of progressive decisions under ...
... took place : a hundred different legal codes came to compete with each other : tribal codes that had never been subject to rigorous philosophic appraisal , to experimental probation , to the refinement of progressive decisions under ...
Page 222
... took his faith at the point where he found it and went on from there . For Loyola , as for Shakespeare , all the world was a stage ; and he saw that the drama could not be effectively produced unless the time and the setting were taken ...
... took his faith at the point where he found it and went on from there . For Loyola , as for Shakespeare , all the world was a stage ; and he saw that the drama could not be effectively produced unless the time and the setting were taken ...
Table des matières
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
PRELUDE TO AN ERA | 17 |
THE PRIMACY OF THE PERSON | 52 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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achieved active actual Aristotle Augustine baroque became become belief body Calvin capitalism capitalist Christian Church civilization classes classic created cult culture Dante death despotism discipline divine Divine Comedy doctrine dream economic effort erotic esthetic eternal existence experience fact faith fascist finally forces freedom French revolution gave Geddes Greek Heaven Héloise human ideal idolum impulse industrial institutions invention Jesuits Jesus Jesus's Karl Marx living London machine man's Manichees marriage Marx means mechanical medieval ment merely Middle Ages mind Mithraism modern monasticism moral nature never nineteenth century organic original perhaps personality Petrarch philosophy Plato political practice production Protestantism reason religion revolution Roman Romanesque Rome Rousseau sense sexual social society sought soul spirit super-ego symbols theology Thomas Aquinas tion took truth turned utilitarian Utopia values vitality vols Western whole words York