Power and Self-consciousness in the Poetry of ShelleyMacmillan, 1986 - 234 sider |
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Side 89
... experience . Hume's conclusion had been that our experience of the ordered world is less the experience of a substantial self than a ' habit of mind ' , based upon the constant recurrence of certain ' ideas ' . " But Shelley's response ...
... experience . Hume's conclusion had been that our experience of the ordered world is less the experience of a substantial self than a ' habit of mind ' , based upon the constant recurrence of certain ' ideas ' . " But Shelley's response ...
Side 91
... experience of the self : the sense of identity as an achievement , a victory wrested from the flux and variety of empirical experience , the establishing of coherence and connection . Obviously such a mode of self- awareness feels very ...
... experience of the self : the sense of identity as an achievement , a victory wrested from the flux and variety of empirical experience , the establishing of coherence and connection . Obviously such a mode of self- awareness feels very ...
Side 224
... experience ' as fructified on the one hand by the active life of the intellect and on the other of openness in perception . A man who merely lives in the activity of eyes , ears and other sense - organs would gain little or no ...
... experience ' as fructified on the one hand by the active life of the intellect and on the other of openness in perception . A man who merely lives in the activity of eyes , ears and other sense - organs would gain little or no ...
Indhold
the Painted Veil | 1 |
Contrary Landscapes | 8 |
Literary Powers | 26 |
Copyright | |
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Andre udgaver - Se alle
Power and Self-Consciousness in the Poetry of Shelley Andrew J Welburn,Thomas Heinzen Begrænset visning - 1986 |
Power and Self-Consciousness in the Poetry of Shelley Andrew J Welburn,Thomas Heinzen Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2014 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
achievement Ahrimanic already appears attempt awareness Beauty become begin believe Blake Caleb Williams called century characters Christian Coleridge Complete conception consciousness continued critics daemonic dark death depths doubt effect elements emotion example existence experience fear feeling figure final forces Gothic hope human ideal ideas imagination important individual influence intellectual intense interest Italy knowledge landscape later light limits literary living London look magic magnetism man's material means Metaphysics mind moral move mysterious nature novel objects occult once original painted veil passage perception perhaps philosophical poem poet poetic poetry possible present Prometheus Unbound reality reason remains response Romantic scepticism seems sense Sensibility sentimental shapes Shelley Shelley's sometimes soul Speculations spirit suggests terror things thought tradition truth turn ultimate understanding universe vision visionary whole writing