The Bucknell Review, 第 15 卷Bucknell University Press, 1954 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 29 筆
第 40 頁
... believe it can be said that , in part at least , the narrow- ing of the scope of tragedy was a direct result of the change in world view that occurred during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries . But it is a result of the change ...
... believe it can be said that , in part at least , the narrow- ing of the scope of tragedy was a direct result of the change in world view that occurred during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries . But it is a result of the change ...
第 50 頁
... believe that he discussed the immortality of the soul . We do not need to believe that the particular arguments are authentic ; they cannot have been , for they " separate " the forms ; Plato's explicit statement of his absence ...
... believe that he discussed the immortality of the soul . We do not need to believe that the particular arguments are authentic ; they cannot have been , for they " separate " the forms ; Plato's explicit statement of his absence ...
第 57 頁
... believe that man originally lived on a level with the animals.29 Part of the explanation of man's rise lay in technical mastery ; a famous passage tells how man learned weaving from the spider , building from the swallow , and music ...
... believe that man originally lived on a level with the animals.29 Part of the explanation of man's rise lay in technical mastery ; a famous passage tells how man learned weaving from the spider , building from the swallow , and music ...
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