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(1992) Eros and Eris, Dordrecht, Springer.

Strategien des Begehrens

Liebe und Konflikt bei Augustinus

Remo Bodei

pp. 67-78

Starting from Augustine, the author outlines a particular aspect of a possible logic of desires i.e., passionate desires for happiness, oriented towards the future. Since passions are seen simply as entailing temporary madness, loss of liberty and self-control, from Plato onward, an insuperable enmity between passions and reasons has been declared. Only Augustine, like Spinoza and unlike the Stoics, did not attack frontally passions, but tried rather to change their direction, and aimed — through love and memory — at the very end of conflicts and entanglements of will and at that kind of happiness which only eternal life in paradise can offer to men.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-1464-8_6

Full citation:

Bodei, R. (1992)., Strategien des Begehrens: Liebe und Konflikt bei Augustinus, in P. Sars, C. Bremmers & K. Boey (Hrsg.), Eros and Eris, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 67-78.

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