Coleridge observed by way of introduction to his subject that "modern thought is distinguished from ancient by its cultivation of the 'relative' spirit in place of the 'absolute. Educational Review - Página 344editado por - 1891Visualização completa - Sobre este livro
| Walter Pater - 1920 - 272 páginas
...fix thought in a necessary formula, and the varieties of life in a classification by " kinds," or P~ genera. To the modern spirit nothing is, or can be...under conditions. The philosophical conception of the A relative has been developed in modern times / through the influence of the sciences of observation.... | |
| Vernon Blake - 1925 - 428 páginas
...curiosity to penetrate " ? He lived among the beginnings of modern empirical science under whose reign " nothing is, or can be, rightly known, except relatively* and under conditions." So, distraught by the new and revolutionary study of nature, submitting unwillingly to its dictates,... | |
| Walter Pater - 1980 - 531 páginas
...forth and elaborated in Pater's f1rst published essay, seven years before the date of the Preface: "To the modern spirit nothing is or can be rightly known except relatively and under conditions" — "Coleridge's Writings," Westminster Review, XXIX, ns (January, 1866), 107. On the same page Pater... | |
| E. S. Shaffer, Elinor Shaffer - 1980 - 374 páginas
...impact of Pater's relative spirit on the British scene. Again in some aspects Pater's relative spirit ('to the modern spirit nothing is or can be rightly known except relatively under conditions')19 corresponds to Nietzsche's epistemological perspectivism ('1st nicht nothwendig... | |
| George Levine - 1981 - 368 páginas
...31. The connections are there not only in the passage quoted earlier, but in others, such as these: "To the modern spirit nothing is, or can be rightly...known, except relatively and under conditions. The philosophic conception of the relative has been developed in modem times through the influence of the... | |
| Stephen Regan - 2001 - 594 páginas
...essay on Samuel Taylor Coleridge provide a startling instance of this radically altered disposition: To the modern spirit nothing is, or can be rightly known, except relatively and under conditions . . . Hard and abstract moralities are yielding to a more exact estimate of the subtlety and complexity... | |
| Heike Grundmann - 2003 - 342 páginas
...Erscheinungen gesehen, sondern allein durch ihre momentane Wirkung auf den Betrachter, denn: „To die modern spirit nothing is, or can be rightly known, except relatively and under conditions."82 Das Ich als 'elusive, inscrutable, mistakable seif besitzt seine einzige Rettung in... | |
| Viola Hildebrand-Schat - 2004 - 888 páginas
...bestimmbare Erscheinungen gesehen, sondern allein durch ihre momentane Wirkung auf den Betrachter, denn: „To the modern spirit nothing is, or can be rightly known, except relatively and under condmons."82 Das Ich als 'elusive, inscrutable, rmstakable seif besitzt seine einzige Rettung in der... | |
| Martin Daunton - 2005 - 444 páginas
...account of literariness in fact extended to all forms of knowledge: 'To the modern spirit', he argued, 'nothing is, or can be rightly known, except relatively and under conditions.' He went on to explain that 'truth' did not mean the 'truth of eternal outlines ascertained once for... | |
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