Essays

앞표지
At the Clarendon Press, 1894
 

선택된 페이지

인기 인용구

xxx 페이지 - And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation ; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand.
318 페이지 - In Greek philosophical language, фиоч« always means that which is primary, fundamental, and persistent, as opposed to what is secondary, derivative, and transient ; what is 'given,' as opposed to that which is made or becomes.
317 페이지 - Ilepi ijivcreciiii, so commonly given to philosophical works in the sixth and fifth centuries BC, does not mean, " On the Nature of Things," — a far later use of the word, — but simply, " Concerning the Primary Substance.
viii 페이지 - Quickly likens the nose of the dying wit and philosopher—" for his nose was as sharp as a pen on a table of green frieze.
168 페이지 - ... to produce upon the ear of his readers a sense of reality. If he be quite real he will seem to attempt to be funny. If he be quite correct he will seem to be unreal.
168 페이지 - The ordinary talk of ordinary people is carried on in short sharp expressive sentences, which very frequently are never completed — the language of which even among educated people is often incorrect. The novel-writer in constructing his dialogue must so steer between absolute accuracy of language — which would give to his conversation an air of pedantry, and the slovenly inaccuracy of ordinary talkers, which if closely followed would offend by an appearance of grimace — as to produce upon...
16 페이지 - The ауаЬцата are not themselves immediately perceived by sense at all. It is only when the individual mind has been freed by Socratic questioning, and turned about, and asked What is it...
128 페이지 - As full of spirit as the month of May, And gorgeous as the sun at midsummer, Wanton as youthful goats, wild as young bulls. I saw young Harry, with his beaver on, His cuisses on his thighs, gallantly...
9 페이지 - ... objection in a strong light '. The unity of the Republic is not that of a syllogistic § 6. 1 The following passage is characteristic both of Krohn's acuteness and of his illogical logic (Der Plat. Staat, p. 107, ed. 1876) : — ' Hier wird der grosse Riss des Platonismus sichtbar. Der moralisirende Sokratiker hatte den ersten Entwurf geschrieben, der Metaphysiker fand eine wahrere Wesenheit. Beide treffen jetzt kämpfend auf einander, Beide verleugnen sich nicht. Der Reformer, der die Krankheit...
16 페이지 - Platonic language, by a process of fiiafpcm? and crvvayu>yri, — only, in more modern terminology, when some effort is made to distinguish, abstract, and generalize, — that the soul begins to have an inkling of the nature of that world, which was dimly represented to her in crude experience, — of a real finger, of a real square, of the Sun himself as an embodied god, &c. And she learns that these things, however perfect in their kinds (vn.

도서 문헌정보