Sinopsis
An introductory series of 12 talks on philosophers from Plato and Aristotle to Descartes and Sartre, given by Father Francis Selman, lecturer in philosophy. Visit Totus2us.com for much more. Blessed John Paul II's motto was to Mary: Totus Tuus - All Yours. Our Lady is also everything to us - Totus 2us.
Episodios
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Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
18/04/2012 Duración: 11minFr Francis on Hegel: "Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, the last of the German idealists, was born in 1770 and died in Berlin, where he had been professor of philosophy for 13 years, in 1831. He produced his Phenomenology of Spirit when a lecturer in Jena in 1803. We find his political theory in The Philosophy of Right, published in 1821. His philosophy represents the attempt to fit all branches of knowledge into a unified system, which can be summarised in one sentence: absolute Spirit objectifies itself in the world and through the world comes to complete self-consciousness. Let us see how this happens according to Hegel." Visit Totus2us.com for much more.
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Immanuel Kant - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
18/01/2012 Duración: 14minFr Francis on Immanuel Kant: "Thus Kant came to think that not all our ideas are derived from experience, as the Empiricists had held. Indeed, he thought that sensations and impressions do not by themselves constitute experience but require ideas in order to turn them into intelligible experience. As these ideas must precede experience they cannot be known from it a posteriori but be a priori. Thus Kant introduced a so-called revolution into the way we view the world. Just as Copernicus taught us not to think that the heavens revolve round the earth but, on the contrary, the earth goes round the sun, so Kant proposed that our ideas are not based on the structure of the world but the way we see the world is conditioned by ideas that come from our mind. These are Kant’s synthetic a priori ideas or categories of thought, which are the ways that we consider and talk about objects and include the ideas of quantity (one or many), quality, unity (when a thing is seen as a whole), substance (when considered as a subj
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The British Empiricists: Locke, Berkeley and Hume - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
16/11/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis on the British Empiricists: "While rationalism, the doctrine that knowledge is derived from the ideas of the mind, flourished on the European Continent from Descartes to Kant and Hegel, the British Isles produced their own brand of philosophy, known as empiricism, which comes from the Greek word for experience, empeiria. Empiricism is the doctrine that our ideas are derived from the experience of the senses. This is not to be equated with materialism. In this talk, I shall take the three chief British empiricists together: John Locke, George Berkeley and David Hume." Visit Totus2us.com for much more.
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René Descartes - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
14/09/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis on René Descartes: "In conclusion, we can ask whether Descartes' thought 'I think therefore I am' proved as much as he thought. Descartes' thought that his doubt about the existence of the world came to an end with the certainty of his own existence. But other people have thought that it proved no more than that he existed, that it led into solipsism, the view that I am the only person who exists because I am only conscious of myself. Descartes forgot that he could not have had this thought without his body, because he had conceived it with words which he had learnt from other people by hearing with his ears what they uttered with their mouths. As a student once observed to me, if the world did not exist, Descartes could not have existed. Perhaps it is not so clear that we can think the world is an illusion, and our senses are more liable than Descartes allowed." Visit Totus2us.com for more.
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William Ockham - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
10/08/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis on William Ockham. Visit Totus2us.com for more.
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St Thomas Aquinas - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
27/07/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis: "Aquinas said 'Human beings exist on the border, in confinio, between the material and immaterial.' Thus we are a kind of microcosm of the whole world as we alone combine the material and the immaterial. We are made to get our knowledge through the senses of the body, but we can also think of things not just as they exist in matter, which is as particular or individual things, but also generally. It is not clear what Aristotle thought of about the immortality of the soul. This presented a difficulty for him since it seems that if the soul is a form of the body, it cannot exist on its own separately, but must perish with the body. However Aquinas showed that as the mind is immaterial, it has an activity, thinking, which is not a part of the body. So the soul can exist on its own because it is in some way independent of the body. In Aquinas's view, we reach our end by our actions. We only reach our proper end when our actions are directed to our end. These are virtuous actions in accord with right r
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St Augustine - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
06/07/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis: "Memory was like a great treasure house in Augustine's view. One of the things we find in memory is ourselves - this is to be conscious of ourselves, when we do not forget ourselves. Thus memory came to have a second meaning in St Augustine: of self-consciousness. When I am conscious of things outside me, they are present to me, but when I am conscious of myself I am present to myself. Nothing is more present to the mind, St Augustine remarked, than the mind itself. Thus the mind knows itself. What did Augustine think that the mind knows about itself? That it is not material like the body, but immaterial. Here, I think Augustine gives 2 good reasons which retain all their relevance for today. First, as the mind knows it is distinct from the material things it thinks about, if it were air or fire .. it would think of air or fire in another way than it does about other matter, and so not with an imaginary fantasy. But we do not think of air or fire in another way, so the mind does not consist of any
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Aristotle - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
29/06/2011 Duración: 11minFr Francis: "A notable feature of Aristotle's natural science, which distinguishes him sharply from many of our contemporaries, is that he thought that things in nature have an end. The end of a plant or animal, for example, is to reach its perfect development. It is difficult to deny that many things in nature serve a purpose or end: Aristotle gives the example of leaves, to provide shade. To say that things have an end is quite contrary to thinking that the world has just come about by chance. He also thought that we have an end. The end of human beings, he says, is to act well, just as the end of a harpist is to play the harp well. In Aristotle's view, we act well when we act according to our nature, not contrary to it. Thus for us to act well is to act according to reason, because we have rational nature. To act according to reason is what we mean by virtue. He discusses the virtues, especially justice, courage, prudence and temperance, in his book the Nicomachean Ethics. He begins this book by observing
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Plato - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
15/06/2011 Duración: 09minFr Francis: "The dawn of philosophy, as we know it in the West, occurred in ancient Greece around the year 600 BC with Thales, one of the 7 Wise Men of Greece. But only fragments of the earliest philosophers have come down to us in the writings of others. The first philosopher from whom we have complete works is Plato, who lived from 427-347 BC and was a discple of Socrates. .. Plato helps us to raise our minds above the material world to a higher world and so to spiritual realities.. Plato regarded the philosopher as a lover of truth, only he sought knowledge of truth in another world than this one." Visit Totus2us.com for more.
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Introduction - Philosophy and Faith with Francis Selman on Totus2us
15/06/2011 Duración: 04minFr Francis gives an introduction to the series. Visit Totus2us.com for more.