History of the Intellectual Development of Europe 1

Cover History of the Intellectual Development of Europe 1
History of the Intellectual Development of Europe 1
Draper John William
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To make men virtuous was 8toici«n.
his aim. But this is essentially connected with knowledge, for Zeno was persuaded that if we only know what is gwA we shall be certain to practise it. Me therefore rejected Plato's fancies of Ideas and Beminisoences, leaning to the common-sense doctrines of Aristotle, to whom he approached in many details. With him Sense fdmishes the data of knowledge, and Beason oombines them: the soul being modified by external things, and modifying them in return, he believ
...ed that the mind is at first, as it were, a blank tablet, on which sensation writes marks, and that the dis- tinctness of sensuous impressions is the criterion of their truth. The changes thus produced in the soul constitute ideas ; but, with a prophetic inspiration, he complained that man will never know the true essence of things.
In his Physios Zeno adopted the doctrine of Strato, that the world is a living being. He believed that The Phyties nothing incorporeal can produce an effect, and ofzena hence that the soul is corporeal.


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