The Mind and Art of Jonathan SwiftOxford University Press, 1953 - 400 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 33
Page 59
... passions are utterly reprehensi- ble ; reason must and can govern ; the life which is proper to man is a life of unimpassioned reason . This was in part an inheritance from medieval thought . The Greek view of human nature , of the ...
... passions are utterly reprehensi- ble ; reason must and can govern ; the life which is proper to man is a life of unimpassioned reason . This was in part an inheritance from medieval thought . The Greek view of human nature , of the ...
Page 61
... passions , for it is these that deflect man from virtue and contentment . The passions are voluntary , born of reason but of a false reason ; the will , by giving assent to these false judgments , gives life to the passions . Another ...
... passions , for it is these that deflect man from virtue and contentment . The passions are voluntary , born of reason but of a false reason ; the will , by giving assent to these false judgments , gives life to the passions . Another ...
Page 62
... passions de l'âme , though his tone is Stoical , reaches the conclusion that passion is good provided it serves the will . In thus coming to terms with the passions Descartes was moved by a spirit similar to that which before the end of ...
... passions de l'âme , though his tone is Stoical , reaches the conclusion that passion is good provided it serves the will . In thus coming to terms with the passions Descartes was moved by a spirit similar to that which before the end of ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 3 |
MOOR PARK AND SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE | 10 |
The Battle of the Books AND A Tale of a | 49 |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appeared believe called century chapter character church close common compositions concerning course critics dated dean death Dublin early edition effect England English entire expression fact final force friends give given Gulliver's Travels hand human ideas imagination interest Ireland Irish issued John June King Lady land later learning Letter living London look Lord manner March matter mean mind ministry months Moor Park moral nature never once original Oxford pamphlets party passed passions period person pieces political Pope position present prose Queen reason reference regarded relations religion satire seems seen sense spirit Stella Swift taken Tale Temple Temple's theory thing thought tion took tory true turned University verse Voyage whigs writings written wrote