The Condition of ManHarcourt, Brace, 1944 - 467 pages A study of the development of the personality and the community. |
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Page 22
... body ; and his disease was no mysterious possession of the body by an evil spirit , but an event in the order of nature , to be followed patiently and to be rectified , not by a single remedy , but by every means that is available for ...
... body ; and his disease was no mysterious possession of the body by an evil spirit , but an event in the order of nature , to be followed patiently and to be rectified , not by a single remedy , but by every means that is available for ...
Page 86
... body in its service . Therefore he who loves his neighbor does good partly to the man's body and partly to his soul . What benefits the body is called medicine ; what benefits the soul , discipline . Medicine here includes every- thing ...
... body in its service . Therefore he who loves his neighbor does good partly to the man's body and partly to his soul . What benefits the body is called medicine ; what benefits the soul , discipline . Medicine here includes every- thing ...
Page 140
... body's feelings was significant . The body itself was both an object of naturalist observation and an instrument for its further advance . If saints still despised the body , that rejection no longer held for the burghers and the ...
... body's feelings was significant . The body itself was both an object of naturalist observation and an instrument for its further advance . If saints still despised the body , that rejection no longer held for the burghers and the ...
Table des matières
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
PRELUDE TO AN ERA | 17 |
THE PRIMACY OF THE PERSON | 52 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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achieved Aquinas Aristotle Augustine baroque became become belief body Calvin capitalism capitalist Christian Church cities civilization classes classic created cult culture Dante death despotism discipline divine Divine Comedy doctrine dream economic effort erotic esthetic existence experience external 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 moral nature never nineteenth century organic original perhaps personality Petrarch philosophy Plato political practice production Protestantism reason religion revolution Roman Rome Rousseau sense sexual social society sought soul spirit Summa Theologica super-ego symbols theology Thomas Aquinas tion took Trans truth turned utilitarian Utopia values vitality vols Western whole words York