Biographia Literaria, 第 1 卷 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 76 筆
第 liii 頁
By the only method which could command assent ( the appeal to incontrovertible principles ) they exposed the unreasonableness of the prevailing individualism in questions of taste , and of the mistaken theories on which it leaned .
By the only method which could command assent ( the appeal to incontrovertible principles ) they exposed the unreasonableness of the prevailing individualism in questions of taste , and of the mistaken theories on which it leaned .
第 1 頁
Most often it has been connected with some charge which I could not acknowledge , or some principle which I had never ... suggested to me by particular events , but still more as in . troductory to the statement of my principles ...
Most often it has been connected with some charge which I could not acknowledge , or some principle which I had never ... suggested to me by particular events , but still more as in . troductory to the statement of my principles ...
第 146 頁
That these are not necessary practical results of such principles , we owe to that fortunate inconsequence of our nature , which permits the heart to rectify the errors of the understanding . The detailed examination of the consular ...
That these are not necessary practical results of such principles , we owe to that fortunate inconsequence of our nature , which permits the heart to rectify the errors of the understanding . The detailed examination of the consular ...
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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