The Life of the MindHoughton Mifflin Harcourt, 1981 - 521 sayfa The most intriguing...and thought-provoking book that Hannah Arendt wrote (The New York Times Book Review), The Life of the Mind is the final work by the political theorist, philosopher, and feminist thinker.This fascinating book investigates thought itself as it exists in contemplative life. In a shift from Arendt's previous writings, most of which focus on the world outside the mind, this is an exploration of the mind's activities she considered to be the most fundamental. The result is a rich, challenging analysis of human mental activity in terms of thinking, willing, and judging. |
İçindekiler
Introduction | 3 |
Appearance | 10 |
Science and common sense Kants distinction | 53 |
Contents | 67 |
What Makes Us Think? | 125 |
Platos answer and its echoes | 141 |
The Roman answer | 151 |
The answer of Socrates | 166 |
The problem of the new 28 | 28 |
The Apostle Paul and the impotence | 63 |
Epictetus and the omnipotence of the Will 73 | 73 |
Augustine the first philosopher of the Will 84 | 84 |
German Idealism and the rainbowbridge | 149 |
Nietzsches repudiation of the Will 158 | 158 |
Heideggers Willnottowill 172 | 172 |
The abyss of freedom and the novus ordo | 195 |
The twoinone | 179 |
Where Are We When | 197 |
Postscriptum | 213 |
Introduction 3 | 3 |
Time and mental activities 11 | 11 |
The Will and the modern age 19 | 19 |
Notes 219 | 219 |
Editors Postface | 241 |
JUDGING | 255 |
273 | |
Diğer baskılar - Tümünü görüntüle
The Life of the Mind: The Groundbreaking Investigation on How We Think Hannah Arendt Sınırlı önizleme - 1981 |
Sık kullanılan terimler ve kelime öbekleri
actually Anaximander answer Aristotle Augustine become beginning body called cause chap cognition common sense concept consciousness context Critique of Judgment Critique of Pure death Descartes desire dialogue divine Duns Scotus Epictetus eternal everything evil existence experience fact faculty freedom given Greek Greek philosophy Hannah Arendt Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's Hence Heraclitus human affairs Ibid immortality inherent inner intellect intuition invisible judgment Kant Kant's language living man's manifest matter means mental activities metaphor metaphysics mind mind's nature never Nicomachean Ethics Nietzsche Nietzsche's noein Notes to pages notion novus ordo seclorum object original Parmenides past and future philosophy Plato present primacy Pure Reason question reality Roman seems sheer Socrates soul speaking spectator speculative speech Theaetetus theory things thinkers thinking activity thinking ego thought tion trans true truth two-in-one visible Will's withdrawal words world of appearances