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  • Title: Book: PoF: Introduction by Michael Wilson
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    • freedom, because then nothing apart from ourselves determines our
    • wills, because his will is determined by motives.
    • because his wanting is determined by motives.
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter One: Conscious Human Action
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    • action are precisely and fixedly determined by something else.
    • determined by external causes to exist and to act in a fixed and
    • determined by external causes to exist and to act in a fixed and
    • are determined. Thus the child believes that he desires milk of
    • determined from without, that is to say, by the circumstances
    • arouses a desire in him, then he appears as determined from
    • free means to be able to determine one's life and action by
    • wills, because his wanting is determined by motives. He cannot
    • determined by the strongest motive. But on the other hand
    • the causes which determine the donkey's volition are internal
    • We do not perceive the causes by which our will is determined,
    • hence we think it is not causally determined at all.
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Three: Thinking in the service of Knowledge
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    • determined by the direction and velocity of the first. As long
    • mine really proceeds from my own independent being, or
    • those thoughts and thought-connections determine that
    • taken into account when we come to determine the relationship
    • relation to others before we can determine in what sense it
    • definite, self-determined content of the thinking activity.
    • My contention that we must think before we can examine
    • very different mental picture of a horse from mine, but I
    • thinking looks to an intelligence other than mine, but of how
    • it appears. No, whoever is determined to see in thinking
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Four: The World as Percept
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    • and self-determined nature of thinking cannot,
    • help of thinking am I able to determine myself as subject
    • that he determines himself as an individual confronting the
    • them is determined by the fact that they inhabit the earth.
    • “qualitative”. The former determines the proportions
    • determined by the organization of myself as subject. The
    • should also be able to determine what character it must
    • They determine our percepts, each according to its own
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Five: The Act of Knowing the World
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    • law. If I examine the conditions under which the stone thrown by me moves,
    • The all important thing now is to determine how the being that we ourselves
    • and examine the transmission from sense organs to brain. In each of these
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Six: Human Individuality
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    • special, fully determined entity. Each of us combines
  • Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Seven: Are There Limits to Knowledge?
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    • Let us examine these real principles a little more closely.
    • Monism holds that percepts are determined through
    • build up out of my subjectively determined percepts and my
    • character of our conclusion is, after all, determined only by
    • metaphysics has a character determined by this basic method,
    • nature of this reality he thinks he can determine by inductive
    • determined by the range of his senses, and that he would be
    • case can only contain half the reality, as determined by the
    • Man's being, quite concretely, is determined not only by
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Eight: The Factors of Life
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    • determined elements, which, however, are related to one
    • perception of self is ideally determined by this something in
    • thinking, and the ideally determined elements are the concepts
    • life, determines our personality. Through it we lead a purely
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Nine: The Idea of Freedom
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    • concept and percept is determined by thinking, indirectly and objectively,
    • The process looks different when we examine knowledge, or rather the
    • nature and situation in life. My characterological disposition is determined
    • determines the aim or the purpose of my will; my characterological
    • disposition determines me to direct my activity towards this aim. The mental
    • picture of taking a walk in the next half-hour determines the aim of my
    • minds as patterns which determine all subsequent decisions; they become parts
    • regard to any definite perceptual content. We determine the content of a
    • which determines our action indirectly by way of the conceptual thinking.
    • determine the content of his egoistical striving in accordance with what he
    • determined by the knowledge of them. Such requirements are
    • coincide; that is, neither a predetermined characterological disposition nor
    • external impulse, but it is an action determined purely and simply by its
    • and the special situation, and yet at the same time be determined by
    • allow itself to be determined by them. The content is used only to
    • The decisive factor of an intuitively determined action in any concrete
    • intention of serving the general good. What determines me as a moral being
    • intuitions, I mine. If we both really conceive out of the idea, and do
    • idea is determined by the percept; we have done our share when we have
    • it is not so. The sum total of his existence is not fully determined without
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Ten: Freedom - Philosophy and Monism
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    • as being determined, mechanically or morally, by a
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Eleven: World Purpose and Life Purpose
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    • of cause and effect where the earlier event determines the
    • picture to determine one's action. Thus the later (the deed)
    • necessary to have an ideal, law-determined connection
    • mission in the world is not predetermined, but is at every
    • determined and conditioned by an idea of this limb, floating
    • natural object, be it plant, animal or man, is not determined
    • that an animal or a man is not determined by an idea floating
    • not determined by an idea floating in the air, but it definitely
    • is determined by an idea inborn in it and constituting the
    • denies that natural beings are determined from without
    • are not determined by purpose and plan from without, but
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Twelve: Moral Imagination
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    • is thought of as being directly determined only by the
    • like must be determined by observation of men themselves.
    • accord to determine by moral imagination those mental
    • or merely inferred extra-mundane God) determines my
    • “It is perfectly true that the will is always determined by
    • mine, do they really aim at making me unfree. For this
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Thirteen: The Value of Life
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    • to determine clearly whether, up to the moment of his enquiry, there has
    • cause the pleasure. But if I want to determine the value of life in the
    • presuppose something else which already determines the positive or negative
    • Here we touch the point where reason is not in a position to determine
    • called valueless. Let us, therefore, examine instinct and pleasure to see
    • that the value of a pleasure is determined in life. It is measured by
    • quantities of pleasure and pain resulting from an instinct. I determine the
    • scientifically estimated, and the balance of pleasure thereby determined. It
    • determines the value of life by measuring achievements against aims. An
    • inclination with mere duty, will consequently determine the value of man by
    • time, however, we find that an act of will may also be determined by factors
  • Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Fourteen: Individuality and Genus
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    • his actions a content that is determined by the position he
    • Each member of a totality is determined, as regards its
    • will behave, are determined by the character of the racial
    • from all that is generic, and we are nevertheless determined to
    • respects it is determined not as it should be by the particular
    • determined solely by the mere fact that she is a woman. She
    • individual. Just as little is it possible to determine from the
    • he determines himself, in their pure form (without mixing
  • Title: Book: PoF: Ultimate Questions: The Consequences of Monism
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    • determines the percept as having the abstract form of a
    • another human being are in substance mine also, and I
    • unless he finds it more convenient to let himself be determined
    • out the commands of others, then he will be determined by
    • himself and determined by nothing else. It is true that this
    • impulse is determined ideally in the unitary world of ideas;
  • Title: Book: PoF: Appendix Added to the new edition, 1918
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    • and to put its thinking in the place of mine. I then grasp its
    • thinking takes the place of mine. Through the self-extinction



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