The Enchanted Glass: The Elizabethan Mind in LiteratureBlackwell, 1952 - 293 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 23 筆
第 4 頁
... believe . No more do I believe what others have affirmed , that knowledge is the mother of all virtue , and that every vice is the result of ignorance . If that be true it is capable of being widely interpreted . Further on in the same ...
... believe . No more do I believe what others have affirmed , that knowledge is the mother of all virtue , and that every vice is the result of ignorance . If that be true it is capable of being widely interpreted . Further on in the same ...
第 53 頁
... believe , and , if forbidden to believe their own way , they may turn atheist , and atheism is worse than superstition . Bodin 28 presents an example of the indirect influence of humanism on religion . A still more striking case is that ...
... believe , and , if forbidden to believe their own way , they may turn atheist , and atheism is worse than superstition . Bodin 28 presents an example of the indirect influence of humanism on religion . A still more striking case is that ...
第 63 頁
... believe it to be the possession of ordinary powers to an extraor- dinary degree and admit that not even Shakespeare and Dante could know and reveal the future as fact or opinion or present those aspects of the past about which they had ...
... believe it to be the possession of ordinary powers to an extraor- dinary degree and admit that not even Shakespeare and Dante could know and reveal the future as fact or opinion or present those aspects of the past about which they had ...
內容
CHAPTER PAGE I THE UNIVERSAL NATURE OF THINGS I | 1 |
DERIVATIONS AND INFERENCES | 32 |
PREOCCUPATIONS AND PREJUDGMENTS | 61 |
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Advancement of Learning æsthetic Agrippa Anatomy of Melancholy ancient Arcandam Aristotelian Aristotle aspect astrology authors Bacon believe bethan body Burton Cambridge cause Cicero classical conception cosmology criticism culture divine doctrine drama dramatists elements Eliza Elizabethan literature England ethics evil example expression formal Gabriel Harvey heart heavens Honest Whore Hooker human idea important interpretation John Dee Jonson Julius Cæsar knowledge less literary live logic London Macbeth magic man's matter means ment mind modern Montaigne moral motion nature Neo-Platonism passim passion philosophy plays Plutarch poets point of view political practical principles psychology Puritanism Quintilian Ramist Ramus reason religion religious Renais Renaissance learning rhetoric Richard Hooker sance Scriptures seems Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's significant sixteenth century soul speak Spenser spirits theory things thinkers Thomas Thomas Moffett thought tion true truth universe virtue Wendoll writers