The Structure of Evil: An Essay on the Unification of the Science of ManG. Braziller, 1968 - 430 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 12
Page 87
... equally serious effect and that we mentioned earlier , namely , that when the researchers were freed of the need for hasty reforms , they also became forgetful of the need for a conceptual system : as a result , the study of facts and ...
... equally serious effect and that we mentioned earlier , namely , that when the researchers were freed of the need for hasty reforms , they also became forgetful of the need for a conceptual system : as a result , the study of facts and ...
Page 217
... equally as important as the individualism which the new epoch threw to the fore . I mean of course the attempt at social altruism , the ideal of mutual support , the very idea of the " fabric " of a society — all these declined ...
... equally as important as the individualism which the new epoch threw to the fore . I mean of course the attempt at social altruism , the ideal of mutual support , the very idea of the " fabric " of a society — all these declined ...
Page 360
... equally correct for everyone which played a role . The difficult task ... proved to be : to work out what is thus compellingly valid . KARL JASPERS ( in Schilpp , 1957 , p . 25 ) One of the reasons the politician scorns the academic ...
... equally correct for everyone which played a role . The difficult task ... proved to be : to work out what is thus compellingly valid . KARL JASPERS ( in Schilpp , 1957 , p . 25 ) One of the reasons the politician scorns the academic ...
Contents
PART I | 1 |
CHAPTER Two The Problem of a New Theodicy | 15 |
CHAPTER THREE The Great Moral Groping of the Nine | 33 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
achieve action active Albion Small animal anthropodicy Auguste Comte Baldwin basic Becker behavior Buber Comte Comte's constrictions create creation creative critical cultural Dewey Diderot disciplines early Enlightenment esthetic ethical evil experience fetishism Fourier Freud Georg Simmel Goethe Hegel Huizinga human meanings human nature Hume idea of progress ideal ideal-type idealist individual Kant kind knowledge Leibnitz Lester Ward logical man-centered man's Marx Max Scheler medieval Merz Mills modern moral neurosis Newtonian nineteenth century object one's ontology organism organismic passions personality philosophy possible powers precisely principle problem progressive education psychoanalysis reason Rousseau Saint-Simon Scheler schizophrenia scientific scientists seems self-esteem sense simply social forces social psychology social science society sociology spirit Stendhal striving superordinate symbolic synthesis theodicy theory of alienation things thinkers thought tradition understand understood unified unique unity values vision wanted Ward whole words world view Wright Mills