| Zbigniew Janowski - 2000 - 198 Seiten
...that the idea of liberty is the idea of a power in any agent to do or forbear any particular action, according to the determination or thought of the mind,...whereby either of them is preferred to the other. A century before Locke, the Jesuit theologian Louis Molina defined freedom in almost identical terms.... | |
| Zbigniew Janowski - 2000 - 180 Seiten
...that the idea of liberty is the idea of a power in any agent to do or forbear any particular action, according to the determination or thought of the mind, whereby either of them is preferred to the other ». Cf. notre travail. Cartesian Theodicy. Descartes' Quest for Certitude. Dordrecht, Kluwer Academie... | |
| Gideon Yaffe - 2000 - 194 Seiten
...that the Idea of Liberty is, the Idea of a power in any Agent to do or forbear any particular Action, according to the determination or thought of the mind, whereby either of them is preferr'd to the other: where either of them is not in the Power of the Agent to be produced by him... | |
| Daniel E. White - 2007
...liberty from Locke's Essay on Human Understanding, "a Power ... to do or forbear any particular Action, according to the determination or thought of the mind, whereby either of them is preferr'd to the other."15 In Richard Price's Observations on the Nature of Civil Liberty, the Principles... | |
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