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  1. Apr 2, 2015 · Here are 11 such people who pursued their passions with faith that fortune would follow. 1. Brandon Stanton. Stanton arrived in New York from Chicago in 2010. A self-taught photographer who had...

    • Bill Murphy Jr.
    • Teddy Roosevelt was a man with a lot of hobbies, including obvious ones like hunting, trust busting, and carrying metaphorical sticks. But he was also a passionate boxer and had a brown belt in judo.
    • Napoleon had no rival when it came to battlefield brilliance, so it’s a little surprising that he wasn’t great at his favorite hobby: chess. Although the general supposedly carried a board with him on his military campaigns, he never had much time to practice and was generally regarded as a middling player.
    • Emily Dickinson made more than just amazing poetry – she was also a celebrated baker! Despite being famously shy, Dickinson was sure enough of her bread to enter it in a local competition, in which she won second prize.
    • Amelia Earhart was passionate about a hobby that’s not usually associated with daredevils: stamp collecting. Earhart frequently carried pieces of mail on her landmark flights.
  2. The passions were experiences – now commonly called emotions in the modern period – that had been a subject of debate among philosophers and theologians since the time of Plato. Notable precursors to Descartes who articulated their own theories of the passions include St. Augustine , St. Thomas Aquinas and Thomas Hobbes .

  3. Descartes allows that some passions involve mixtures, even contrary mixtures as in hope and fear. But since passions literally push the pineal gland in a particular direction, movements in different directions tend to cancel each other out.

  4. May 25, 2006 · Some philosophers singled out a particular passion, or group of passions, to head off their taxonomies. In rather different ways, that was the role of wonder for Descartes, and of glory for Hobbes (see Schmitter 2017).

  5. Nov 25, 1999 · Passion and Action explores the place of the affects or passions in seventeenth‐century understandings of the body and mind, and examines the role they were held to play in thought and action.

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  7. Dec 2, 2017 · In The Passions of the Soul (1649) Descartes discarded the Stoic idea that affects are primarily to be dealt with from a moral framework through the application of reason. Instead, he considered affects and emotions neither as good nor bad, but as part of the...

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