The Philosophical Works of Descartes1931 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 14
Page 21
... distinguished from one another , and our knowledge of them all is thus only confused . Further , while now the enumeration ought to be complete , now distinct , there are times when it need have neither of these characters ; it was for ...
... distinguished from one another , and our knowledge of them all is thus only confused . Further , while now the enumeration ought to be complete , now distinct , there are times when it need have neither of these characters ; it was for ...
Page 307
... distinguished and interesting of their time , one of whom has studied not at all , while the other is well acquainted with all that can be learnt in the Schools And there ( in the midst of other discourse which each one can imagine for ...
... distinguished and interesting of their time , one of whom has studied not at all , while the other is well acquainted with all that can be learnt in the Schools And there ( in the midst of other discourse which each one can imagine for ...
Page 366
... of benevolence . And two sorts of love are usually distinguished , the one of which is named the love of benevolence , that is to say the love which incites us to wish well to what we love ; 366 The Passions of the Soul.
... of benevolence . And two sorts of love are usually distinguished , the one of which is named the love of benevolence , that is to say the love which incites us to wish well to what we love ; 366 The Passions of the Soul.
Other editions - View all
The Philosophical Works of Descartes, Vol. 1 of 2: Rendered Into English ... Elizabeth S. Haldane No preview available - 2017 |
The Philosophical Works of Descartes, Vol. 1 of 2: Rendered Into English ... Elizabeth S. Haldane No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
A. K. Coomaraswamy action animal spirits Aristotle arteries ARTICLE attribute believe blood body brain C. E. M. Joad C. I. Lewis cause certainly chiliagon clear clearly and distinctly colour conceive concept consider contrary corporeal corporeal substance deceived deduced depend Descartes desire difficulty Dioptrics discover distinct diverse doubt earth easily effect Epistemon error esteem Eudoxus evil excited exist explained extension fact faculty false feel figure follow hatred heart heat human idea imagination inasmuch judge judgment knowledge Leibniz less likewise magnet magnitude mathematics matter Max Born means method mind mode motion move movement muscles nature nerves never objects observe opinions ourselves Paperbound passions perceive perception perfect pertain philosophy Polyander possess present PRINCIPLE proceed reason recognise regard RENÉ DESCARTES rule sadness sciences sensations senses simple soul species spleen substance sufficient T. L. Heath things thought true truth understanding Upanishads