About This Book
A concise introduction outlines the philosopher's life and systematically explains his core ideas, foregrounding the reality of change and the primacy of lived duration over static intellect. Chapters clarify perception, memory, the relation of mind and body, contrasting true and false notions of time, and defending freedom of the will, while treating evolution and the methodological role of intuition. Later sections explore ethical, political, and religious implications and offer critical reflections. An appended bibliography and notes aim to guide further study, and the presentation emphasizes accessibility for general readers while assessing practical consequences of the thought surveyed.
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