Biographia Literaria, 第 1 卷 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 56 筆
第 lxxi 頁
This point of view , as we saw , Coleridge had already adopted in The Friend of 1809 ; and on his conception of the reason , as subsequently developed , hinges his whole attempt to reconcile religion and philosophy .
This point of view , as we saw , Coleridge had already adopted in The Friend of 1809 ; and on his conception of the reason , as subsequently developed , hinges his whole attempt to reconcile religion and philosophy .
第 61 頁
It is not , I own , easy to conceive a more opposite translation of the Greek Phantasia than the Latin Imaginatio ; but it is equally true 5 that in all societies there exists an instinct of growth , a certain collective , unconscious ...
It is not , I own , easy to conceive a more opposite translation of the Greek Phantasia than the Latin Imaginatio ; but it is equally true 5 that in all societies there exists an instinct of growth , a certain collective , unconscious ...
第 189 頁
... must expect the charge of having substituted learned jargon for clear conception ; while , according to the creed of our modern philosophers , ao nothing is deemed a clear conception , but what is representable by a distinct image .
... must expect the charge of having substituted learned jargon for clear conception ; while , according to the creed of our modern philosophers , ao nothing is deemed a clear conception , but what is representable by a distinct image .
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according activity actual appear association attempt become Biog cause chapter Coleridge Coleridge's common conception concerning consciousness criticism direction distinction doubt edition effect equally Essay evidence existence experience expression fact faculty fancy feelings force former genius German give ground heart human ideas images imagination immediate important impressions instance intellect intelligence interest knowledge language learned least lectures less Letters light lines literary living material meaning mere merely mind moral nature never notions object once opinions original PAGE pass passage philosopher poems poet poetic poetry possible present principles published question reader reason reference reflection regard remains result Schelling sense soul spirit theory things thought tion true truth understanding universal volume whole Wordsworth writings written