Biographia Literaria, 第 1 卷The University Press, 1954 - 272 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 88 筆
第 lviii 頁
... imagination , though still receiving its law from the understanding , is yet so far free , that its activity is determined not by the necessity of a particular cognition , but by its own character as an organ of know- ledge in general ...
... imagination , though still receiving its law from the understanding , is yet so far free , that its activity is determined not by the necessity of a particular cognition , but by its own character as an organ of know- ledge in general ...
第 lxiii 頁
... imagination . And of this unification the principle is found in the self , conceived not abstractly but as the whole nature of man , or all that is essential to that nature . Thought and feeling , in their original identity , demand ...
... imagination . And of this unification the principle is found in the self , conceived not abstractly but as the whole nature of man , or all that is essential to that nature . Thought and feeling , in their original identity , demand ...
第 lxvii 頁
... imagination or esemplastic power . But the promised deduction is cut short by the timely or untimely letter of warning from Coleridge's fictitious friend . The chapter on the imagination , ' which cannot , when it is printed , amount to ...
... imagination or esemplastic power . But the promised deduction is cut short by the timely or untimely letter of warning from Coleridge's fictitious friend . The chapter on the imagination , ' which cannot , when it is printed , amount to ...
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常見字詞
according 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 express fact faculty fancy feelings forces former Friend genius German give ground hand heart human ideas images imagination immediate important impressions instance intellectual intelligence interest knowledge known language least lectures less Letters lines living material meaning memory mere merely mind moral Morning nature never notions object once opinions original PAGE passage philosopher poems poet poetic poetry possible present principles published question reader reason reference reflection remains result Review Schelling sense soul speaks spirit theory things thought tion true truth understanding universal volume whole Wordsworth writings written