Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
These desires are inculcated by society and by false beliefs about what we need. They are not natural and are to be shunned. [86] Epicurus' teachings were introduced into medical philosophy and practice by the Epicurean doctor Asclepiades of Bithynia, who was the first physician who introduced Greek medicine in Rome. Asclepiades introduced the ...
Adler (1908) believed that in a three-child family, the oldest child would be the most likely to suffer from neuroticism and substance addiction which he reasoned was a compensation for the feelings of excessive responsibility "the weight of the world on one's shoulders" (e.g. having to look after the younger ones) and the melancholic loss of ...
Related: 55 Socrates Quotes on Philosophy, Education and Life. Canva/Parade. 17. “Quality is not an act, it is a habit.” ... 24. “Where the needs of the world and your talents cross ...
When it was time to dismantle the city walls of the Meng family, the governor was reluctant to have his city walls torn down and convinced the head of the Meng family not to do so. The Zuo Zhuan recalls that the governor advised against razing the walls to the ground as he said that it made Cheng vulnerable to Qi, and cause the destruction of ...
This suggests that family resemblance was of prime importance for Wittgenstein's later philosophy; however, like many of his ideas, it is hard to find precise agreement within the secondary literature on either its place within Wittgenstein's later thought or on its wider philosophical significance.
"I believe the world is one big family, and we need to help each other." — Jet Li “Family and friendships are two of the greatest facilitators of happiness.” — John C. Maxwell. Short ...
For Marx then, an explanation of human nature is an explanation of the needs of humans, together with the assertion that they will act to fulfill those needs. (c.f. The German Ideology, chapter 3). [15] Norman Geras gives a schedule of some of the needs which Marx says are characteristic of humans:
It’s a way to fight without admitting to your feelings so you can blame the other person when they react, says Nina Vasan, MD, clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at Stanford School of ...