Thus there was no elitism here, nor anything intellectualistic, but rather an existential concern above all. |
What we can say is that all these interpretations reveal an intellectualistic conception of the connections between perception and knowledge. |
The second, most clearly expounded by Aquinas, is an intellectualistic view. |
Maimonides's ethics as well as his interpretation of the pentateuchal laws is intellectualistic, as the foregoing account shows. |
That is why we are interested in it, and this is also a source of pleasure, not purely intellectualistic, but material and emotional too. |
It is hardly surprising in these circumstances that the conception of human nature that emerged from Plato's work should have had such a pervasively intellectualistic cast. |