Stoics and Saints: Lectures on the Later Heathen Moralists, and on Some Aspects of the Life of the Mediaeval ChurchMacmillan and Company, 1893 - 296 |
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Strona 16
... words are inscribed , Friend , here it will be well for thee to abide , for here pleasure is the highest good , " he will find the keeper of that garden a kindly hospitable man , who will set before him a dish of ( 66 THE PLEASURE ' OF ...
... words are inscribed , Friend , here it will be well for thee to abide , for here pleasure is the highest good , " he will find the keeper of that garden a kindly hospitable man , who will set before him a dish of ( 66 THE PLEASURE ' OF ...
Strona 18
... words , ' here pleasure is the highest good , ' gives at once some colour to scandal . On the other hand , the morality of the sect was always stoutly asserted by the Epicureans and seems to have been generally believed by their ...
... words , ' here pleasure is the highest good , ' gives at once some colour to scandal . On the other hand , the morality of the sect was always stoutly asserted by the Epicureans and seems to have been generally believed by their ...
Strona 20
... words his doctrine about pleasure : - When we say then , that pleasure is the end and aim , we do not mean the pleasures of the prodigal , or the pleasures of sensuality , as we are understood by some who are either ignorant and ...
... words his doctrine about pleasure : - When we say then , that pleasure is the end and aim , we do not mean the pleasures of the prodigal , or the pleasures of sensuality , as we are understood by some who are either ignorant and ...
Strona 25
... words of Epicurus sounded like Come unto me and rest . ' As the quiet cell of the monk to the world - weary soldier of a later age , it had the charm of peace and of freedom from care , and brought with it in- difference to the ...
... words of Epicurus sounded like Come unto me and rest . ' As the quiet cell of the monk to the world - weary soldier of a later age , it had the charm of peace and of freedom from care , and brought with it in- difference to the ...
Strona 29
... word Cynic on his lips . The original starting point of the two Sects was probably the indifference of Socrates to outward things . At any rate , Cynic and Stoic cultivated the most severe simplicity . In the case of a Diogenes , this ...
... word Cynic on his lips . The original starting point of the two Sects was probably the indifference of Socrates to outward things . At any rate , Cynic and Stoic cultivated the most severe simplicity . In the case of a Diogenes , this ...
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Strona 59 - For we are made for co-operation, like feet, like hands, like eyelids, like the rows of the upper and lower teeth. To act against one another then is contrary to nature; and it is acting against one another to be vexed and to turn away.