Biographia Literaria, 第 1 卷Oxford University Press, 1967 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 44 筆
第 xli 頁
... Kant first took hold of him , as he significantly expresses it , with ' giant hands ' . To Kant his obligations ( as he was never tired of asserting ) were far greater than to any other of Kant's countrymen : to him alone could he be ...
... Kant first took hold of him , as he significantly expresses it , with ' giant hands ' . To Kant his obligations ( as he was never tired of asserting ) were far greater than to any other of Kant's countrymen : to him alone could he be ...
第 xlii 頁
... Kant says in the Critique of Pure Reason . But he was far from committing himself to Kant's system as a whole . That the intellect was competent to deal with phenomena only , and with these as merely interconnected parts of a whole ...
... Kant says in the Critique of Pure Reason . But he was far from committing himself to Kant's system as a whole . That the intellect was competent to deal with phenomena only , and with these as merely interconnected parts of a whole ...
第 lviii 頁
... Kant's reproductive imagination corresponds the fancy . To the imagination as poetic Coleridge assigns , as we have seen , a far greater dignity and significance than Kant could possibly allow it . For in Kant's view even the highest ...
... Kant's reproductive imagination corresponds the fancy . To the imagination as poetic Coleridge assigns , as we have seen , a far greater dignity and significance than Kant could possibly allow it . For in Kant's view even the highest ...
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activity aesthetic appear association become Biog Biographia Literaria cause chapter Coleridge's common conception consciousness conviction Crabb Robinson criticism Descartes diction distinction doctrine edition equally Essay existence experience expression fact faculty faith fancy feelings Fichte genius German ground Hartley heart human ideal ideas images imagination impressions intellect intelligence intuition Jacobinism judgement Kant Kant's knowledge language least lectures less Letters literary Lyrical Ballads meaning mechanical philosophy ment metaphysical Milton mind moral Morning Post nature never notions object opinions original Pantheism passage philo philosopher Plato Plotinus poems poet poetic poetry preface present principles published reader reality reason S. T. Coleridge Sara Coleridge Schelling Schelling's self-consciousness sensation sense sonnets soul Southey Southey's speculations Spinoza spirit symbol Synesius theory things thought tion transcendental Transcendental Idealism true truth understanding universal volume whole words Wordsworth writings καὶ τὸ