Modern Thomistic Philosophy von R.P. Phillips | An Explanation for Students. Vol. 1: The Philosophy of Nature | ISBN 9783868385397

Modern Thomistic Philosophy

An Explanation for Students. Vol. 1: The Philosophy of Nature

von R.P. Phillips
Buchcover Modern Thomistic Philosophy | R.P. Phillips | EAN 9783868385397 | ISBN 3-86838-539-8 | ISBN 978-3-86838-539-7

Modern Thomistic Philosophy

An Explanation for Students. Vol. 1: The Philosophy of Nature

von R.P. Phillips
The first volume of this introduction in Thomistic philosophy includes as part 1 Cosmology as the philosophy of inanimate nature and as part 2 the philosophy of animate nature that is philosophical psychology.
“Dr. Phillips is to be congratulated on the clear and lucid way he has set forth Thomist doctrines and especially for the manner in which he has rendered the Latin terminology of Schoolman in English, an achievement which makes his book very readable and interesting even for those unacquainted with the great treatises of Schoolman.”
L. J. Walker, in Philosophy, Vol. 11, Issue 43.
The first volume of this introduction in Thomistic philosophy includes as part 1 Cosmology as the philosophy of inanimate nature and as part 2 the philosophy of animate nature that is philosophical psychology.
“Dr. Phillips is to be congratulated on the clear and lucid way he has set forth Thomist doctrines and especially for the manner in which he has rendered the Latin terminology of Schoolman in English, an achievement which makes his book very readable and interesting even for those unacquainted with the great treatises of Schoolman.”
The first volume of this introduction in Thomistic philosophy includes as part 1 Cosmology as the philosophy of inanimate nature and as part 2 the philosophy of animate nature that is philosophical psychology. “Dr. Phillips is to be congratulated on the clear and lucid way he has set forth Thomist doctrines and especially for the manner in which he has rendered the Latin terminology of Schoolman in English, an achievement which makes his book very readable and interesting even for those unacquainted with the great treatises of Schoolman.” L. J. Walker, in Philosophy, Vol. 11, Issue 43.