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- Title: Book: PoF: Introduction by Michael Wilson
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- everybody. The book is written in such a way that the very reading
- Title: Book: PoF: Author's Prefaces: Preface to the first edition, 1894; revised, 1918
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- nobody should be compelled to understand. From anyone
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter One: Conscious Human Action
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- continue. But this is just the human freedom that everybody claims
- conscious of the causes which guide him. Nobody will deny
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Two: The Fundamental Desire for Knowledge
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- before him. The artist seeks to embody in his material the
- own body belongs to the material world. Thus the “I”, or
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Four: The World as Percept
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- the body in which we seek the origin of the sound exhibits a
- world, but only states of my own body. In the sense of
- body, the molecules of my hand by no means touch those of
- the body directly, but there remains a certain distance between
- body and hand, and what I experience as the body's resistance
- to the body and perceive only its effects on my organism.
- a body in the external world. There, upon this body, I
- complete circle. We became conscious of a colored body.
- I had no eye, the body would be, for me, colorless. I
- cannot therefore attribute the color to the body. I start on
- soul — here I find it indeed, but not attached to the body. I
- find the colored body again only on returning to my starting
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Five: The Act of Knowing the World
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- than the purely knowing subject (a winged cherub without a body). But he
- of a body, whose affections are, for the intellect, the starting point for
- subject as such, this body is a mental picture like any other, an object
- body, this body is given in two entirely different ways: once as a mental
- of his will is at once and without exception also a movement of his body:
- as a movement of the body. The act of will and the action of the body are
- human body the “objectivity” of the will. He believes that in the
- activities of the body he feels an immediate reality — the
- that the activities of our body come to our consciousness only through
- limb of its body. The separate facts appear in their true significance, both
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Six: Human Individuality
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- from the view that the boundaries of my body are absolute
- me. The forces which are at work inside my body are the
- attitudes which the horse's body successively assumes when
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Seven: Are There Limits to Knowledge?
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- life-principle permeating the organic body, the soul for which the
- by the warmth-giving body, the movement of its parts. Here
- to the concept “body” would be, shall we say, the interior
- within the body and to account for the warmth which is
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Nine: The Idea of Freedom
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- means of the body.
- most prizes, and that makest me the servant of nobody, thou that settest up
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Eleven: World Purpose and Life Purpose
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- Just as the formation of a limb of the human body is not
- body to which the limb belongs, so the formation of every
- just this, that I embody the working principle of the machine,
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Twelve: Moral Imagination
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- to embody them skillfully into the actual world. Conversely,
- influencing the body in a particular way (e.g.,
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Thirteen: The Value of Life
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- must be done by another. Somebody else must bear the torment of existence in
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