Download Maximum and Minimum Prins - A Unified Appr. with Applns by M. Sewell PDF

By M. Sewell

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The Daimonion of Socrates: An Interpretive Study of Plato's «Theages»

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Since . thi~. ~(){ . . -. : ·. .. : . ~· . . ' : :- ~ :· . : ) ~ :: to stenle sophistry but offers peace and bltss to man suffer-. fro~ tlie self-i~posed' ~ori straint~. It ere~ a~:de~p unde~st~nding of life and world. No . ''~£ i· .. · :r• ·, Reality there is no duality. A compl~tely ne\Y, point of view has b~en found. Jooked at from ! : • lead '. ing tes . . :- "" ,• • . • 1 • ·• . ~ ~ wittiaut• is ·seen· . rsoscendedl.. f-uJ,. oint of. eive. this· tranq:uillitY: as . d: con-templativeness.

It should be born~in min~, however, that the "woman " appears to him in thisvya,y. only,, because his own femininity h _a s remaine~ undeveloped·. Therefore the ,indivjdual's emotional attitude towards his. will depend upon the nature-of the objectivate4. extraject. sitive affective attitude will determine love for, the object; a . nega~ive affective attitude, hate. : or an o _uter object makes the split between mas~uJjnity and femininity still greater. 1 longing oc~ur s at tl:)e e~p~p$e of ipte~est.

II 84 2. A;,gubtara-Nikilya. II 10, 4. tin~­ and drinking. tion of the erogenous areas of the body to . the . l in the love life of the adults. In the same wa,y, trai[lin_g in social contact leads to a continued desire for companionship and for the o~her things of which we are accustomed to say ''the more we g~t the more we w~nt". This continuation shows that there is still s,ome unpleasa,nt feeling-emotional tone. The effor_t was . 'ituation. ul;l ev,e_n after the consummatory response are called adient, and,, this ~ort of repetition falls under the he·a d of perseverance.

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