A Journey to the History of Philosophy Vol. 2
“...We begin with thought, as it is in a quite abstract, natu-ral or sensuous form, and we proceed from this to the Idea as determined. This first period shows the begin-ning of philosophic thought and goes on to its develop-ment and perfection as a totality of knowledge in itself; this takes place in Aristotle as representing the unity of what has come before.
In Plato there is just such a un-ion of what came earlier, but it is not worked out, for he only represents the Idea generally. The Neo-platonists have been called eclectics, and Plato was said to have brought about the unity; they were not, however, eclec-tics, but they had a conscious insight into the necessity for uniting these philosophies...”
“...We begin with thought, as it is in a quite abstract, natu-ral or sensuous form, and we proceed from this to the Idea as determined. This first period shows the begin-ning of philosophic thought and goes on to its develop-ment and perfection as a totality of knowledge in itself; this takes place in Aristotle as representing the unity of what has come before.
In Plato there is just such a un-ion of what came earlier, but it is not worked out, for he only represents the Idea generally. The Neo-platonists have been called eclectics, and Plato was said to have brought about the unity; they were not, however, eclec-tics, but they had a conscious insight into the necessity for uniting these philosophies...”
| Taksit Sayısı | Taksit tutarı | Genel Toplam |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | 72,03 | 144,06 |
| 3 | 49,68 | 149,05 |
| 6 | 25,58 | 153,49 |
| 9 | 17,65 | 158,88 |


