Philosophical Aspects of Thanatology, Band 2Florence M. Hetzler, Austin H. Kutscher MSS Information Corporation, 1978 |
Im Buch
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Seite 1
... person will usually undergo a decline and decay of his physical , mental and , perhaps , moral powers . Such a person will be increasingly unable to function normally - to engage in his usual activities , think with some degree of ...
... person will usually undergo a decline and decay of his physical , mental and , perhaps , moral powers . Such a person will be increasingly unable to function normally - to engage in his usual activities , think with some degree of ...
Seite 4
... person's return to an acceptable state of well - being , what is their value when the most that they can yield is ... person is dying and do not invoke implausible divine commandments . For it can be argued that modifying or dropping the ...
... person's return to an acceptable state of well - being , what is their value when the most that they can yield is ... person is dying and do not invoke implausible divine commandments . For it can be argued that modifying or dropping the ...
Seite 5
... person otherwise unable to communicate is often taken as evidence that the entity before us is still the same complete person we knew in good health and happiness . Similarly , while we acknowledge that some external condi- tions are ...
... person otherwise unable to communicate is often taken as evidence that the entity before us is still the same complete person we knew in good health and happiness . Similarly , while we acknowledge that some external condi- tions are ...
Inhalt
A PRAGMATIC DISCUSSION OF THE NORMS OF DYING | 1 |
NINETEEN OCCASIONAL THESES CONCERNING | 11 |
BRIDGING THE COMMUNICATIONS GAP BETWEEN | 17 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Philosophical Aspects of Thanatology, Band 1 Florence M. Hetzler,Austin H. Kutscher Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1978 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept acrophobia actual analysis Antigone Aristotle B. F. Skinner become behavior belief beloved biological body called Christ Christian conceive concept concern concrescence consciousness context creative Creon Crito dead decision Department of Philosophy divine doctrine dying person eco-cybernetic Epicurus eternal ethical event evil existence existential experience fact fact of death fear of death feeling final finite freedom Freud function future Gabriel Marcel God's happy Hegel human idea identity immortality individual James libido living Marcel meaning meaningful metaphysical mind mode moral mystery myth nature noosphere object occasion one's ontological organism particular philosophical physical Plato Plotinus possible present problem promise psychological question rational reality reason reductive materialism reflection relation relationship religious resurrection seems sense social Socrates soul Spinoza subjective form survival temporal thanatology theory thought tion transcendent ultimate understanding University Whitehead words York