Humanism: Philosophical Essays

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MacMillan, 1903 - 297 Seiten
 

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Seite 170 - Des Menschen Tätigkeit kann allzuleicht erschlaffen, Er liebt sich bald die unbedingte Ruh; Drum geb' ich gern ihm den Gesellen zu, Der reizt und wirkt und muß als Teufel schaffen.
Seite xx - There is no possible point of view from which the world can appear an absolutely single fact. Real possibilities, real indeterminations, real beginnings, real ends, real evil, real crises, catastrophes, and escapes, a real God, and a real moral life, just as commonsense conceives these things, may remain in empiricism as conceptions which that philosophy gives up the attempt either to ' overcome' or to reinterpret in monistic form.
Seite xxi - is in reality only the application of Humanism to the theory of knowledge'.8 The general need is to re-humanize the universe. Re-humanization of the universe, humanism in other words, demands in the first place a humanization of logic. This demand is in part a protest against the arid subtleties and mental gymnastics 1 A second edition, with the author's name...
Seite 8 - ... structure, even if it has not moulded it out of pre-rational instincts. In short, a reason which has not practical value for the purposes of life is a monstrosity, a morbid aberration or failure of adaptation, which natural selection must sooner or later wipe away.
Seite 170 - So setzest du der ewig regen, Der heilsam schaffenden Gewalt Die kalte Teufelsfaust entgegen, Die sich vergebens tückisch ballt! Was anders suche zu beginnen, Des Chaos wunderlicher Sohn! MEPHISTOPHELES Wir wollen wirklich uns besinnen, Die nächsten Male mehr davon! Dürft ich wohl diesmal mich entfernen?
Seite 10 - For our interests impose the conditions under which alone Reality can be revealed. Only such aspects of Reality can be revealed as are not merely knowable but as are objects of an actual desire, and consequent attempt, to know. All other realities or aspects of Reality, which there is no attempt to know, necessarily remain unknown, and for us unreal, because there is no one to look for them.
Seite xvi - ... which, though not expressly applied to logic, would certainly have been helpful to JS Mill in his endeavour to eliminate necessity from thought. Prof. James's " radical empiricism " has been hailed by Mr. FCS Schiller (in MIND, NS, vol. vi., No. 24) as " a declaration of the independence of the concrete whole of man, with all his passions and emotions unexpurgated, directed against the cramping rules and regulations by which the Brahmins of the academic caste are tempted to impede the free expansion...
Seite 11 - That the Real has a determinate nature which the knowing reveals but does not affect, so that our knowing makes no difference to it, is one of those sheer assumptions which are incapable, not only of proof, but even of rational defence. It is a survival of a crude realism which can be defended only, in a pragmatist manner, on the score of its practical convenience, as an avowed fiction.
Seite 245 - V. Have your feelings on questions I., II., and IV. undergone change ? If so, when and in what ways ? " VI. (a) Would you like to know for certain about the future life, or (b) would you prefer to leave it a matter of faith f
Seite 9 - At a blow it awards to the ethical conception of Good supreme authority over the logical conception of True and the metaphysical conception of Real.

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