Unlock the full potential of your projects.
Try MeisterTask for free.
Não tem uma conta?
Criar conta gratuita
Navegar
Mapas em destaque
Categorias
Gerenciamento de projetos
Negócios e metas
Recursos Humanos
Brainstorming e Análise
Marketing e Conteúdo
Educação e Notas
Entretenimento
Vida
Tecnologia
Design
Resumos
Outro
Idiomas
English
Deutsch
Français
Español
Português
Nederlands
Dansk
Русский
日本語
Italiano
简体中文
한국어
Outro
Exibir mapa completo
Copiar e editar mapa
Copiar
Sophie's World Chapters 1-6 David Nolasco 11A
Educação e Notas
DN
David Nolasco
Seguir
Começar.
É Gratuito
Cadastrar-se com Google
ou
inscrever-se
com seu endereço de e-mail
Mapas mentais semelhantes
Esboço do mapa mental
Sophie's World Chapters 1-6 David Nolasco 11A
por
David Nolasco
1. The Garden of Eden
1.1. Who are you?
1.2. Where does the world come from?
1.3. Space must sometime have been created by something else.
1.4. Sophie was very confused
1.5. She thought that everything that existed had to have a beginning
2. The Top Hat
2.1. Philosopher's search for the truth resembles a detective story
2.2. Experience the world incredulously just as when a magician pulls a rabbit out of a hat
2.3. We are part of the world so it can't all be deceitful
2.4. The only thing we require to be good philosophers is the faculty of wonder
3. The Myths
3.1. Stories about persons or Gods
3.2. Tried to explain natural events
3.3. Self-justifying
3.4. Greek philosophers did not trust myths
4. The Natural Philosophers
4.1. Many theories on what makes up nature
4.2. Nothing can come from nothing
4.3. Heraclitus: Everything flows
4.4. Anaxagoras: Natures is built up of an infinite number of particles invisible to the eye
5. Democritus
5.1. He believed that everything was built up of tiny invisible blocks
5.2. Lego is the most ingenious toy in the world
5.3. Nature is really built up of different atoms that join and separate again
5.4. Atoms flowed through nature
6. Fate
6.1. If God or Fate governed the course of history, people had no free will.
6.2. People believed that they could learn their fate from an oracle
6.3. Greeks believed that sickness could be ascribed to divine intervention
Comece Já. É grátis!
Conectar-se com Google
ou
Inscrever-se