No news is good news
Revolution in Europe
KARL MARX
POLARIZATION OF THE CLASSES
The Means of subsistence
The POWER of IDEAS
SHACKLED BY VALUE SYSTESM
FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
Yo, Ho, Neighbour....!
BERTRAND RUSSELL
Checking the Facts
LIVING TO THE FULL
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Church
Prayer
JACQUES LACAN
KARL POPPER
Einstein
RUSSIAN DISSIDENTS
NATURE'S LEADERS
VOTES FOR WOMEN
TO DO IS TO KNOW
THE POWER OF BELIEF
Man's Oneness with Nature
Branch
Darwin
Darwin's study
Charles Darwin
Alfred Wallace, aged 46, in 1869
Beagle
Beagle
Charles Darwin
What is a Primitive World
Down House
Darwin's old study at Down
Mirror Test
The LEGACY of SCHOPENHAUER
ABOVE AND BEYOND
Representation and Reality
THE NATURE OF EXPERIENCE
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A third idea of Hegel’s that has been highly influential is that the alienation. The point here is that man, in the process of building his own civilization, creates all sorts of institutions and rules and ideas that then become constraints on him, external to him, despite the fact that they are his own invention. He may even not understand them. For instance, when it comes to religion, many people project the qualities they most desire for themselves on to God whom they then see as perfect, omniscient, and omnipotent, while thinking of themselves as contrast as base, ignorant, and powerless. The unhappy soul who does this fails to realize that it is =, at least in part, human characteristics that he is projecting on to a being other than himself. He sees God as being quote different from indeed opposite to, himself, when in reality he and God share the same spiritual existence. One of Hegel’s followers, Feurbach, thought that God and gods were solely human creations, and were entirely to be understood in this way. That idea of Feurerbach’s was widely influential in the 19th century. ~ Page 163
Hegel on Nihilism / Buddhism
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