Searching The Philosophy of Freedom Matches
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Query was: pleasure
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- Title: Book: PoF: Introduction by Michael Wilson
Matching lines:
- likes and dislikes, our feelings of pleasure and pain. It contains
- smell, and so on, but feelings of pleasure and pain and even thoughts,
- Title: Book: PoF: Author's Prefaces: Preface to the first edition, 1894; revised, 1918
Matching lines:
- Whoever appreciates only the pleasures of the senses is
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter One: Conscious Human Action
Matching lines:
- freedom cannot consist in choosing, at one's pleasure, one or
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Three: Thinking in the service of Knowledge
Matching lines:
- pleasure, the feeling is also kindled by the object, and it is
- this object that I observe, but not the feeling of pleasure.
- This objection, however, is based on an error. Pleasure does
- my activity; whereas pleasure is produced in me by an object
- object by a stone which falls on it. For observation, a pleasure
- event arouses in me a feeling of pleasure, but I certainly
- thing that “it gives me a feeling of pleasure,” I characterize
- pleasure it is perfectly possible for a more delicate observation
- “I” to which the pleasure merely presents itself. The same
- 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
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- manifests itself as pleasure or displeasure.
- self-knowledge, and pleasure and pain with the perception of
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Nine: The Idea of Freedom
Matching lines:
- pleasure.
- promote the greatest possible quantity of pleasure for the acting
- individual. Pleasure itself, however, cannot become a motive; only an
- imagined pleasure can. The mental picture of a future feeling,
- greatest quantity of pleasure for oneself through one's action, that is, of
- with the mental picture of one's own pleasures, but to the derivation of an
- civilization bring a feeling of pleasure, turns out to be a special case of
- from the feeling of pleasure that it brings. For them, this becomes a
- 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
- misery into the world than pleasure. The disagreeableness of the hangover
- outweighs pleasure in the world. No man, even though relatively the happiest,
- fulfillment of the striving creates pleasure in the striving individual,
- failure creates pain. It is important here to observe that pleasure and pain
- enjoyment gives rise to a desire for its repetition or for a fresh pleasure,
- 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
- previous pleasure until the means of experiencing the greater or more
- refined pleasure fail me. Only when pain appears as a natural consequence of
- pleasure, as for instance when a woman's sexual pleasure is followed by the
- pleasure. But the opposite is the case. To have no striving in one's life
- creates boredom, and this is connected with displeasure. Now, since it may
- pleasure. Who does not know the enjoyment given by the hope of a remote but
- us its fruits only in the future. It is a pleasure quite independent of the
- attainment of the goal. For when the goal has been reached, the pleasure of
- fulfillment is added as something new to the pleasure of striving. If anyone
- non-fulfillment will eventually outweigh the possible pleasure of fulfillment,
- The fulfillment of a desire brings pleasure and its nonfulfillment brings
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