10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «APPETIBLE»
Discover the use of
appetible in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
appetible and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Other Selves: Philosophers on Friendship
In the same way the appetible object gives the appetite, first, a certain adaptation
to itself, which consists in complacency in that object; and from this follows
movement towards the appetible object. For the appetitive movement is circular, ...
2
Truth, 3 Volumes: Questions I - XXIX
Natural appetite tends to the appetible thing itself without any apprehension of
the reason for its appetibility; for natural appetite is nothing but an inclination and
ordination of the thing to something else which is in keeping with it, like the ...
3
Aquinas and the Supreme Court: Biblical Narratives of Jews, ...
So too the appetible object gives the appetite, first, a certain aptitude [
coaptationem] for itself, which consists in pleasure at the appetible object [
complacentia]; and fi'om this follows a movement toward the appetible object [et
qua sequitur ...
Eugene F. Rogers, Jr., 2013
In the same way the appetible object gives the appetite, first, a certain adaptation
to itself, which consists in complacency in that object; and from this follows
movement towards the appetible object. For "the appetitive movement is circular,"
as ...
Saint Thomas (Aquinas), 1985
Natural appetite tends to the appetible thing itself without any apprehension of
the reason for its appetibility; for natural appetite is nothing but an inclination and
ordination of the thing to something else which is in keeping with it, like the ...
6
On Love and Charity: Readings from the Commentary on the ...
Love, too, is a more vehement affection than desire insofar as it bespeaks the
bounding and forming of affection by the appetible object/ to which desire is [then
] moved.202 2. To the second, it should be said that love naturally precedes ...
Saint Thomas Aquinas, 2008
7
Wisdom, Law, and Virtue: Essays in Thomistic Ethics
It consists in this, namely, that something is appetible, an object of (or precise
opposite number vis-a`-vis) appetite. The word ''appetible'' is here used in a way
analogous to such words as ''audible,'' ''visible,'' ''tangible,'' ''desirable.
8
The Oxford Handbook of Aquinas
Since the proper object of Daniel's rational appetite (or will) is not just some
particular appetible object, but rather an appetible object as understood,57
Daniel may be attracted to and moved by the appetible object as understood by
him, and ...
Brian Davies, Eleonore Stump, 2012
9
Purgatorio: Commentary:
In the same way the appetible object gives the appetite first a certain adaptation
to itself, which consists in complacency in that object; and from this follows
movement towards the appetible object. For the appetitive movement is circular, ...
10
Praeambula Fidei: Thomism and the God of the Philosophers
This suggests that what is the First Intelligible is a simple substance that is
actuality.33 (2524) The same point can be made by appeal to what is meant by
the appetible: “For that which is prior in the genus of intelligible things is also
better in ...