The Spectator: With Notes, and a General Index ...S. Marks, 1826 |
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... PLEASURES MORE THAN LOVERS OF GOD . THE English word pleasure is of a very general and indeterminate fignification , denoting what is agreeable either to the body or to the mind : Thus we not only speak of the pleasures of fenfe , but ...
... PLEASURES MORE THAN LOVERS OF GOD . THE English word pleasure is of a very general and indeterminate fignification , denoting what is agreeable either to the body or to the mind : Thus we not only speak of the pleasures of fenfe , but ...
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... Pleasure drives actions, even to the point of a person committing suicide, which is seemingly far from pleasure. When the present moment lacks pleasure severely enough, ending all future similar moments would provide him what he seeks ...
... Pleasure drives actions, even to the point of a person committing suicide, which is seemingly far from pleasure. When the present moment lacks pleasure severely enough, ending all future similar moments would provide him what he seeks ...
Страница 31
... pleasure, especially for the greatest pleasure on offer, the dishes would eventually smell of rot. You might be watching the sun set in Greece, but you would be doing it without a job. Epicurus denies there are two competing motives at ...
... pleasure, especially for the greatest pleasure on offer, the dishes would eventually smell of rot. You might be watching the sun set in Greece, but you would be doing it without a job. Epicurus denies there are two competing motives at ...
Страница 47
... pleasure from this communication.25 Sexual or aesthetic, and probably more sexual and aesthetic, this sensuality takes pleasure in tension, in its own tension felt not as the lack of an object but as an expansion of a subject. This ...
... pleasure from this communication.25 Sexual or aesthetic, and probably more sexual and aesthetic, this sensuality takes pleasure in tension, in its own tension felt not as the lack of an object but as an expansion of a subject. This ...
Страница 97
... pleasure. He might be feeling nothing at all on the hedono-doloric spectrum. For another, if Epicurus were to say that such static pleasures are intrinsically good, then he would not really be a hedonist. He would be maintaining that ...
... pleasure. He might be feeling nothing at all on the hedono-doloric spectrum. For another, if Epicurus were to say that such static pleasures are intrinsically good, then he would not really be a hedonist. He would be maintaining that ...
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acquaintance admiration Æneid agreeable appear beauty behold body called cern character Cicero consider conversation creature dæmon death delight desire discourse divine endeavour entertainment eyes fancy favour fortune gentleman give hand happy hath head hear heart heaven Homer honour hope human humble servant humour husband Iliad imagination Julius Cæsar Jupiter kind lady learning letter live look lover mankind manner marriage married matter ment mind Mohocks nature neral ness never night obliged observed occasion Ovid pain paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person pleased pleasure Plutarch poem poet present racter reader reason received Rechteren Roscommon sight sion soul speak SPECTATOR spirit tell thee thing thor thou thought tion told town tural Virg Virgil virtue whig whole woman words writing yard land young