The Experience of NothingnessTransaction Publishers - 147 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 21
Página xvii
... reflections on the brave Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in my first novel , The Tiber Was Silver , and con- tinuing right up to the lecture I gave in Westminster Cathedral in London in 1994 on the occasion of receiving the Templeton Prize ...
... reflections on the brave Hungarian Revolution of 1956 in my first novel , The Tiber Was Silver , and con- tinuing right up to the lecture I gave in Westminster Cathedral in London in 1994 on the occasion of receiving the Templeton Prize ...
Página xviii
... reflected upon , it does not logically lead to postmodernism , relativism , or the cult of power . On the contrary , within it lie the seeds of a new vindication of reason , but " reason " more accurately con- ceived . Beginning within ...
... reflected upon , it does not logically lead to postmodernism , relativism , or the cult of power . On the contrary , within it lie the seeds of a new vindication of reason , but " reason " more accurately con- ceived . Beginning within ...
Página xx
... reflection taught me — intellectual honesty , intellectual courage , community , and liberty endure . Apart from them , the experience of nothingness does not arise . We fly from it . Confirming liberty in law . There is one other big ...
... reflection taught me — intellectual honesty , intellectual courage , community , and liberty endure . Apart from them , the experience of nothingness does not arise . We fly from it . Confirming liberty in law . There is one other big ...
Página xxvii
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Página xxviii
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Contenido
The Source of the Experience | 31 |
Inventing the Self | 67 |
Myths and Institutions | 95 |
St Therese Doctor | 139 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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