释义 |
apatheia|æpəˈθiːə| Also aˈpathia. [ad. Gr. ἀπάθεια: see apathy.] = apathy 1.
[1887Encycl. Brit. XXII. 567 This remarkable development of Stoic principles leads to the demand for the entire suppression of the affections (ἀπάθεια).] 1893T. H. Huxley Evol. & Ethics 28 That ‘apatheia’ in which desire, though it may still be felt, is powerless to move the will. 1955C. B. Cox in Essays & Studies VIII. 77 The Stoic doctrine of apatheia, the principled refusal to experience more emotion than is forced upon one. 1956S. Beckett Godot i. 42 A personal God..Who from the heights of divine apathia..loves us dearly. |