Searching The Philosophy of Freedom Matches
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- Title: Book: PoF: Introduction by Michael Wilson
Matching lines:
- — drama, painting, architecture, eurythmy —
- likes and dislikes, our feelings of pleasure and pain. It contains
- smell, and so on, but feelings of pleasure and pain and even thoughts,
- with pencil, paints or camera, which would be “to depict”.
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Four: The World as Percept
Matching lines:
- also feelings of pleasure and pain. This aggregate is the
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Six: Human Individuality
Matching lines:
- self-knowledge, and pleasure and pain with the perception of
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Nine: The Idea of Freedom
Matching lines:
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Thirteen: The Value of Life
Matching lines:
- pain outweighs pleasure, sorrow outweighs joy. Existence is a burden, and
- observation of life he hopes to discover whether pleasure or pain
- is always greater than the agreeableness of getting drunk. Pain far
- pain in the world to serve a wise world-purpose. The pain of created beings
- is, however, nothing but God's pain itself, for the life of the world as a
- the world is a continuous battle against God's pain, which ends at last with
- world so that through it He may free Himself from His infinite pain. The
- rids itself of an inward disease, “or even as a painful poultice which the
- All-One applies to himself in order first to divert the inner pain outwards,
- infinite pain. The pain which each one of us suffers is but a drop in the
- infinite ocean of God's pain
- failure creates pain. It is important here to observe that pleasure and pain
- striving itself can by no means be counted as pain. Hence, if it happens
- my pleasure has given birth to pain. I can speak of pain only when desire
- refined pleasure, I cannot speak of this desire as a pain created by the
- refined pleasure fail me. Only when pain appears as a natural consequence of
- enjoyment the originator of the pain. If striving by itself called forth
- pain, then each reduction of striving would have to be accompanied by
- that the pain has nothing whatever to do with the striving as such, but
- source of pain.
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