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- Title: Book: PoF: Introduction by Michael Wilson
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- something granted or imposed from outside. This is only partly true in
- hard work. While this may still be true today, the alternative he
- Man can, it is true, do what he wills, but he cannot will what he
- Title: Book: PoF: Author's Prefaces: Preface to the first edition, 1894; revised, 1918
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- personality of man. The sciences attain their true value only
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter One: Conscious Human Action
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- an external cause. What is true here for the stone is true also
- the child when it desires milk: It is no doubt true that it is
- become active and real. It is, therefore, quite true that the
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Two: The Fundamental Desire for Knowledge
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- The senses give us only the effects of things, not true copies,
- However true it may be that we have estranged ourselves
- from Nature, it is none the less true that we feel we are in her
- can point this way out to us. We have, it is true, torn
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Three: Thinking in the service of Knowledge
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- The same is not true of the concept. I can ask why a particular
- another intelligence might have cannot be a truer one than
- this is not thinking. True, someone might now say: If this is
- electric sparks. It would be much truer to say that precisely
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Four: The World as Percept
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- recognize the true relationship between mental picture and
- true of the nerve paths, and the brain process, and no less of
- true that I can have no percept without the corresponding
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Five: The Act of Knowing the World
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- life would be like a dream, and the discovery of the true state of affairs
- Every true act
- limb of its body. The separate facts appear in their true significance, both
- my mental pictures of reality; I must therefore suppose that the true reality,
- but overlook that what we have found to be true for these other things does
- overcome through the recognition of the true nature of thinking.
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Six: Human Individuality
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- experience. He can, it is true, acquire concepts by one means
- from universal being. A true individuality will be the one who
- Title: Book: PoF: Knowledge of Freedom: Chapter Seven: Are There Limits to Knowledge?
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- presents itself to us, before it has taken on its true nature
- true to its fundamental principle that only what is perceived
- true knowledge. For beings with a different perceptual
- can, therefore, be only relatively true, since it is subject to
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Eight: The Factors of Life
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- to be true, we should have to consider ourselves as
- we lose from these their true reality. If we are ready to
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Nine: The Idea of Freedom
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- percepts, and we shall take the percepts as presenting to us the true
- as the purest expression of human nature. Indeed, we are men in the true
- his own self; his true concept as a moral being (free spirit) is not
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Ten: Freedom - Philosophy and Monism
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- be led towards its goal. ... True existence is the incarnation
- the true reality, freedom is out of the question.
- Monism, then, in the sphere of true moral action, is a
- either the idea of knowledge or the idea of freedom in a true
- But in fact this is not at all true. It is only that nowadays
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Eleven: World Purpose and Life Purpose
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- a special kind of sequence of phenomena. True purposefulness
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Twelve: Moral Imagination
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- the nature of an ancestral one. However true it is that the
- of those of his ancestors, it is equally true that the individual
- “It is perfectly true that the will is always determined by
- the first time the true one: namely, to decide for oneself the
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Thirteen: The Value of Life
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- von Hartmann believes that it is reason that holds the scales. It is true
- this? Either that it is untrue to say that the quantity of pain is greater
- It cannot be said that egoism is overcome in the true sense of the word by
- value of the pleasure diminishes. The same is true for the sum of life in
- he will want to do if he develops the true nature of man to the full.
- he finds in the achievement of what he wants the true enjoyment of life. He
- recognizes as the true value of life only what each individual regards as
- for it sees true morality not in what brings about the agreement of an act
- Title: Book: PoF: Reality of Freedom: Chapter Fourteen: Individuality and Genus
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- to the woman herself to decide. If it is true that women are
- can have ethical value in the true sense. And those moral
- Title: Book: PoF: Ultimate Questions: The Consequences of Monism
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- true form as a self-contained unity, whereas the multiplicity
- (see page 67). To recognize true reality, as against the
- only subjective validity, the true basis of unity was sought in
- reality in its true form, and not as a subjective image that
- the same is true of all other transcendental principles based
- himself and determined by nothing else. It is true that this
- Title: Book: PoF: Appendix Added to the new edition, 1918
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- do with the true state of affairs regarding the process of
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