bodily+desires

  • 21Thumos — (also commonly spelled thymos ) (Greek: θυμός) is an Ancient Greek word expressing the concept of spiritedness (as in spirited stallion or spirited debate ). The word indicates a physical association with breath or blood. The word is also used to …

    Wikipedia

  • 22paradise — /par euh duys , duyz /, n. 1. heaven, as the final abode of the righteous. 2. an intermediate place for the departed souls of the righteous awaiting resurrection. 3. (often cap.) Eden (def. 1). 4. a place of extreme beauty, delight, or happiness …

    Universalium

  • 23Paradise — /par euh duys , duyz /, n. a town in N California. 22,571. * * * ▪ religion       in religion, a place of exceptional happiness and delight. The term paradise is often used as a synonym for the Garden of Eden before the expulsion of Adam and Eve …

    Universalium

  • 24Máel Ruain — Part of the copy of the Martyrology of Tallaght separated from the Book of Leinster and now at University College, Dublin abbot bishop of Tallaght Died …

    Wikipedia

  • 25mortification — (n.) late 14c., mortifying the flesh, suppression of bodily desires, from L.L. mortificationem (nom. mortificatio) a killing, putting to death, from pp. stem of mortificare (see MORTIFY (Cf. mortify)). Sense of feeling of humiliation first… …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 26flesh — n. 1. Muscle and fat (of animal bodies). 2. Meat, animal food. 3. Pulp, edible part (of fruit). 4. Body (as opposed to spirit), flesh and blood, natural man (as opposed to the spiritual). 5. Carnality, sensual appetites, bodily desires. 6 …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 27BDSM — Not to be confused with DBMS. BDSM Aspects B D, B/D, or BD Bondage and Discipline D s, D/s, or Ds …

    Wikipedia

  • 28Nicomachean Ethics — Part of a series on Aristotle …

    Wikipedia

  • 29British moralists of the eighteenth century: Shaftesbury, Butler and Price — David McNaughton In this chapter I discuss the moral theories of three influential writers: Anthony Ashley Cooper, Third Earl of Shaftesbury (1671–1713); Joseph Butler (1692–1752) and Richard Price (1723–91). All three wrote extensively on issues …

    History of philosophy

  • 30mind, philosophy of — Branch of philosophy that studies the nature of mind and its various manifestations, including intentionality, sensation and sense perception, feeling and emotion, traits of character and personality, the unconscious, volition, thought, memory,… …

    Universalium