Dreyfus, La volonté selon Malebranche (Paris, 1958). From Wordnik.com. [GENERAL WILL] Reference
The best known of the Occasionalists was Malebranche. From Wordnik.com. [CAUSATION] Reference
We cannot, however, make Malebranche an irrationalist. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
Malebranche has also the just remark: Liberty is a mystery. From Wordnik.com. [Religion] Reference
Malebranche is the commentator on Aratus, St. Paul, and Cato. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Descartes or Malebranche, but no Leibnitz, no Lockes, no Newtons. From Wordnik.com. [Voltaire] Reference
Malebranche has also truly remarked, La liberté est un mystère. From Wordnik.com. [Essays of Schopenhauer] Reference
Malebranche — why do you not, I say, conclude that your soul is. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
The same paradox may be found in Descartes, Pascal, and Malebranche. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
Working on a project in Philadelphia, Malebranche needed a hair cut. From Wordnik.com. [Barbershop 3: black men, stigma and HIV/AIDS] Reference
They attribute an ˜adverbial theory™ of sensation to Malebranche. From Wordnik.com. [Malebranche's Theory of Ideas and Vision in God] Reference
Like Bacon also, Des - cartes and Malebranche, for example, often show un. From Wordnik.com. [METAPHYSICAL IMAGINATION] Reference
Or perhaps the Malebranche will keep watch over them for eternity in Malebolge. From Wordnik.com. [Herbert Spencer's Evolved Capitalists:] Reference
In similar fashion, Malebranche argued against the efficacy of human volitions. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
Malebranche explains the matter by the influence of the imagination on mothers. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Epicurus and Augustine, Plato and Malebranche, and I still remain in ignorance. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Father Malebranche proves resurrection by the caterpillars becoming butterflies. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
I shall not feign to rank Descartes and Malebranche with these teachers of error. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
It is announced in the speculations of Malebranche -- still more explicitly in those of. From Wordnik.com. [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, No. 382, October 1847] Reference
This also is what Malebranche meant when he regarded the human soul as an obscure domain. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
Your Father Malebranche is right in asserting that we are not able to give ourselves ideas. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Malebranche asks: 'Why do men love beauty? because it is a visible representation of Order.'. From Wordnik.com. [Continental Monthly, Vol. 4, No 3, September 1863 Devoted to Literature and National Policy] Reference
"Very good," observed Willis; "this Malebranche, as you call him, must have been an admiral?". From Wordnik.com. [Willis the Pilot] Reference
About the analysis of causal statements of this sort, Malebranche and Hume were of the same mind. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
Malebranche and Régis have disputed with each other on this subject; but Robert Smith has calculated. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
Spare fast is the companion of the ecstatic moods of a high truth-seeker such as Newton, Malebranche, etc. From Wordnik.com. [The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 17, No. 101, March, 1866] Reference
Father Malebranche was the first well-known writer to put the words “general will” to philosophic use. From Wordnik.com. [GENERAL WILL] Reference
Malebranche made the perception of matter totally objective, and vested the perception in the Divine mind, as we do. From Wordnik.com. [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, No. 382, October 1847] Reference
Malebranche was right when, speaking on this subject, he said: “I think no more of history than I do of the news of my parish.”. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
When Malebranche appeared with his radically revised Cartesianism, designed in part to meet the skeptical difficulties, the skeptic. From Wordnik.com. [Dictionary of the History of Ideas] Reference
The reader will immediately recognize the resem - blance between Al-Ghazali's criticisms of causality and that of Malebranche and Hume. From Wordnik.com. [CAUSATION] Reference
Let us adore the secrets of Providence, but let us distrust the wanderings of the imagination, which Malebranche called la folle du logis. From Wordnik.com. [A Philosophical Dictionary] Reference
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