The Living Principle: English as a Discipline of ThoughtChatto & Windus, 1975 - 264 oldal Na een beschouwing over de relaties tussen wijsgerig denken en Engelse taal volgen analyses van proza en poëzie uit het Engelse taalgebied, in het bijzonder van het werk van T.S. Eliot (1888-1965) |
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1 - 3 találat összesen 57 találatból.
185. oldal
... relation is such that ' relation ' , a word one has to use , seems to lack felicity and is perhaps misleading . What is immediately relevant to these reflections on the nature of language , and to Eliot's case , is Blake's distinction ...
... relation is such that ' relation ' , a word one has to use , seems to lack felicity and is perhaps misleading . What is immediately relevant to these reflections on the nature of language , and to Eliot's case , is Blake's distinction ...
213. oldal
... relation to the ' men whom one cannot hope to emulate ' : it is essentially , we have to deduce , a non- relation . What strikes me about this conception - if ' conception ' is the word- is its blindness to the nature , conditions and ...
... relation to the ' men whom one cannot hope to emulate ' : it is essentially , we have to deduce , a non- relation . What strikes me about this conception - if ' conception ' is the word- is its blindness to the nature , conditions and ...
257. oldal
... relation to ' human kind ' the poetry conveys per- sistently and unambiguously . I have not disguised my own conviction that the assumption in a religious poet is a symptom , manifesting as it does the extent to which he is a ' case ...
... relation to ' human kind ' the poetry conveys per- sistently and unambiguously . I have not disguised my own conviction that the assumption in a religious poet is a symptom , manifesting as it does the extent to which he is a ' case ...
Tartalomjegyzék
Preface page | 9 |
THOUGHT LANGUAGE | 19 |
Thought and Emotional Quality | 71 |
Copyright | |
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achievement actually affirmation ahnung alter ego Andreski Antony and Cleopatra apprehension assertion attitude belongs Blake Blake's Burnt Norton Cartesian dualism challenge close complex concrete consciousness context contrast conveyed Coriolanus course critical dance death discipline distinctive East Coker effect Eliot emotional English language entails essential evocation evoked experience explicit F. H. Bradley F. R. Leavis fact feel force Four Quartets genius gives human creativity human kind human world imagery implicit implicitly inevitable insistence intellectual intelligence intensity intimate judgment literary Little Dorrit Little Gidding living logic manifest Marjorie Grene meaning merely metaphor mind movement nature obvious offered opening paradox paragraph passage pattern philosophical phrase plain play poem poet poetic poetry Polanyi present prompted question quoted reader reality realization recognition recognize recoil relation represented responsibility seems sense sentence Shakespeare significance stanza subtlety suggestion T. S. Eliot theme thing thought truth word write