Scriptures speak, not of the understanding, but of "the understanding heart," making the heart, ie, the great intuitive (or nondiscursive) organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance,... Schelling Anniversary Papers - 24 ページSchelling anniversary papers 著 - 1923 - 341 ページ全文表示 - この書籍について
| Thomas De Quincey - 1911 - 428 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee, all alike...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice"} — It does not mean a justice that differs by its... | |
| 1911 - 202 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee, all alike...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice? It does not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| 1911 - 200 ページ
...of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee, all alike restore to man 's mind the ideals of justice, of hope, of truth, of...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice? It does not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1917 - 716 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee, all alike...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice ? It does not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| Raymond Macdonald Alden - 1921 - 458 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee, all alike...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice f It doe8 not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| Albert Mordell - 1921 - 354 ページ
...in Others (1916). which appeals to the reason and understanding through the affections. It restores "to man's mind the ideals of justice, of hope, of truth, of mercy, of retribution." De Quincey included under the literature of power, prose as well as verse, fairy tales and romances... | |
| Harry Morgan Ayres, Frederick Morgan Padelford - 1924 - 942 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. eadsman how many blows he had given Lord Kilmarnock, and gave him What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice? It does not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| Meyer Howard Abrams - 1971 - 420 ページ
...that the literature of power . . . lives and has its field of action. . . And hence the pre-eminent. y over all authors that merely teach of the meanest that moves, or that leaches, if at all, indirecdy by moving.11* To Plato, poetry had been bad because it aroused the emotions,... | |
| David Bromwich - 1987 - 320 ページ
...organ, to be the interchangeable formula for man in his highest state of capacity for the infinite. Tragedy, romance, fairy tale, or epopee,* all alike...would languish for want of sufficient illustration. What is meant, for instance, by poetic justice? - It does not mean a justice that differs by its object... | |
| |