The Experience of NothingnessTransaction Publishers - 147 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 45
Página x
... becoming a term beloved of the young . ) Still , Stanford students compared favorably to the Harvard fresh- men I had just been teaching . Those at Stanford seemed much less intimidated by the world of learning , took to that world ...
... becoming a term beloved of the young . ) Still , Stanford students compared favorably to the Harvard fresh- men I had just been teaching . Those at Stanford seemed much less intimidated by the world of learning , took to that world ...
Página xii
... becoming radicalized , I was struggling to find my way out of that mess . This book gave me a solid foundation for doing that , and I have been building on it ever since . " Nada y Nada y Nada .. ." Still , I have tried not to import ...
... becoming radicalized , I was struggling to find my way out of that mess . This book gave me a solid foundation for doing that , and I have been building on it ever since . " Nada y Nada y Nada .. ." Still , I have tried not to import ...
Página xiii
... become quite familiar with the experience of nothingness . It isn't new to them . They have , in a way , more to say about it than the innocent atheist , who seems surprised by the night and sometimes ( like the poet Dylan Tho- mas ) ...
... become quite familiar with the experience of nothingness . It isn't new to them . They have , in a way , more to say about it than the innocent atheist , who seems surprised by the night and sometimes ( like the poet Dylan Tho- mas ) ...
Página xvi
... become a conservative . ) I failed to find any writer in the tradition , however , who pointed out that those who call themselves nihilists , such as Nietzsche and Sartre ( among many others ) , have committed one flagrant oversight ...
... become a conservative . ) I failed to find any writer in the tradition , however , who pointed out that those who call themselves nihilists , such as Nietzsche and Sartre ( among many others ) , have committed one flagrant oversight ...
Página xix
... becoming all alike . By the very fact of belonging to a pluralistic society of this type , of course , Americans do become a distinctive type of human being ev- erywhere recognizable , whatever our ethnic origins , as " Americans . " A ...
... becoming all alike . By the very fact of belonging to a pluralistic society of this type , of course , Americans do become a distinctive type of human being ev- erywhere recognizable , whatever our ethnic origins , as " Americans . " A ...
Contenido
The Source of the Experience | 31 |
Inventing the Self | 67 |
Myths and Institutions | 95 |
St Therese Doctor | 139 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action Albert Camus American argument Aristotle Aristotle's become behavior believe Bernard Lonergan called Camus century choice choose concept concrete consciousness courage culture darkness discernment drive to question Eldridge Cleaver emotions emptiness ence Erik Erikson ethical experience of nothingness fact faith feel free society freedom honesty horizon human Ibid images imagine individual inner insights institutions intellectual Lasswell liberty live man's meaning ment Michael Novak mind modern moral myth Myth of Sisyphus ness Nicomachean Ethics Nietzsche nihilism objectivity one's ourselves pain perceive perception Pericles persons philosophical political possible pragmatic Press R. D. Laing Random House reason reflection rience Sartre seems sense of reality shape social story structure symbols theory Therese things tion tradition truth University values virtue Werner Heisenberg words writes York young