The popular works of Johann Gottlieb Fichte, tr., with a memoir of the author by W. Smith, 1권 |
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20 페이지
... hence I promise , on my side too , perfect openness . " * " Oh " Whether there can be love without esteem ? ' yes , -thou dear , pure one ! Love is of many kinds . Rousseau proves that by his reasoning , and still better by his example ...
... hence I promise , on my side too , perfect openness . " * " Oh " Whether there can be love without esteem ? ' yes , -thou dear , pure one ! Love is of many kinds . Rousseau proves that by his reasoning , and still better by his example ...
23 페이지
... hence I have always despised it . Unhappily it is here bound up with a part of the respect which our fellow - men entertain for us , and this has never been a matter of indifference to me . Perhaps I may by and by free myself from this ...
... hence I have always despised it . Unhappily it is here bound up with a part of the respect which our fellow - men entertain for us , and this has never been a matter of indifference to me . Perhaps I may by and by free myself from this ...
26 페이지
... think , I must act least of all can I think about trifles ; and hence it is not exactly my business to become a Swiss professor , that is , a schoolman . " So stand my inclinations : -now for my duties 26 MEMOIR OF FICHTE .
... think , I must act least of all can I think about trifles ; and hence it is not exactly my business to become a Swiss professor , that is , a schoolman . " So stand my inclinations : -now for my duties 26 MEMOIR OF FICHTE .
31 페이지
... store for me , and hence will give me nothing to do here , as indeed has been the case ; or intends by these troubles to exercise and invigorate me · still further . I have lost almost everything , except RESIDENCE AT LEIPZIC . 31.
... store for me , and hence will give me nothing to do here , as indeed has been the case ; or intends by these troubles to exercise and invigorate me · still further . I have lost almost everything , except RESIDENCE AT LEIPZIC . 31.
34 페이지
... Hence arises a slavish , crouching , hypocritical spirit . A revolution is indeed impending : but when ? and how ? In short , I will be no preacher in Saxony . " The only record of his religious opinions at this time which is preserved ...
... Hence arises a slavish , crouching , hypocritical spirit . A revolution is indeed impending : but when ? and how ? In short , I will be no preacher in Saxony . " The only record of his religious opinions at this time which is preserved ...
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absolutely Academic Freedom according acquired action activity actually already appear arises assume atheism attained become character compelled comprehend conceive conception cultivation determined Divine Idea dost thou duty eternal existence faith feel Fichte Fichte's finite freedom Genius Germany Hence higher honour impulse independent individual Infinite intuition Jena JOHANN GOTTLIEB FICHTE Kant knowledge Königsberg labour latter laws of thought lectures literary living manifestation means mind mode moral never object outward particular peculiar perceive perception perfect person Pforta philosophy possess possible power of Nature present principle proceed Prussia pure purpose Rammenau reality reason recognised Saxony Scholar sciousness sensation sensation of sight sensual world society soul speak Spirit Student thee thine things thou art thou canst thou dost thou hast thought thyself tion Transcendental Idealists true truth uncon University vocation whole wholly Wissenschaftslehre world of sense Zurich
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88 페이지 - The One remains, the many change and pass : Heaven's light for ever shines, Earth's shadows fly ; Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass, Stains the white radiance of Eternity, Until Death tramples it to fragments.
167 페이지 - The cold, colossal, adamantine spirit, standing erect and clear, like a Cato Major among degenerate men; fit to have been the teacher of the Stoa, and to have discoursed of Beauty and Virtue in the groves of Academe!
470 페이지 - Not for idle contemplation of thyself, not for brooding over devout sensations ; — no, for action art thou here ; thine action, and thine action alone, determines thy worth.
40 페이지 - I am now thoroughly convinced that the human will is free, and that to be happy is not the purpose of our being, — but to deserve happiness.
132 페이지 - In the progress of my present work, I have taken a deeper glance into religion than ever I did before. In me the emotions of the heart proceed only from perfect intellectual clearness ; — it cannot be but that the clearness I have now attained on this subject shall also take possession of my heart.
269 페이지 - ... joy and blessedness flow in upon his soul. And it lies in the Divine Idea that all men must come to this gladdening consciousness — that the outward and tasteless Finite Life may be pervaded by the Infinite, and so enjoyed...
303 페이지 - ... becomes impossible for him to live without employment. Lastly, everything is vulgar and ignoble which robs man of respect for himself, of faith in himself, and of the power of reckoning with confidence upon himself and his purposes. Nothing is more destructive of character than for man to lose all faith in his own resolutions because he has so often determined, and again determined, to do that which nevertheless he has never done. Then he feels it necessary to...
65 페이지 - Every judgment, however expressed, I shall thankfully acknowledge ; every objection which seems incompatible with the cause of truth, I shall meet as well as I can. To truth I solemnly devote myself, at this my first entrance into public life. Without respect of party or of reputation, I shall always acknowledge that to be truth which I recognise as such, come whence it may ; and never acknowledge that which I do not believe. The public will pardon me for having thus spoken of myself, on this first...
154 페이지 - Who can know what great deeds, what excellent in' stitutions, what noble manners of many nations of ' antiquity may have past away into oblivion, because ' their succeeding generations have been enslaved, and ' have left the conqueror, in his own way, and without ' contradiction, to tell their story...
536 페이지 - Thou art, and seemest to Thine own being, I can never know, any more than I can assume Thy nature. After thousands upon thousands of spirit-lives, I shall comprehend Thee as little as I do now in this earthly house. That which I conceive. becomes finite through my very conception of it : and this...