Development of English Literature and Language, Volumele 1-2Griggs, 1888 |
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Pagina 85
... Aristotle was rendered into Latin , had been almost entirely forgotten within the pale of the Romish Church , but now in the eleventh century , imported across the Pyrenees into France from the Arab conquerors of Spain , glimmered with ...
... Aristotle was rendered into Latin , had been almost entirely forgotten within the pale of the Romish Church , but now in the eleventh century , imported across the Pyrenees into France from the Arab conquerors of Spain , glimmered with ...
Pagina 130
... Aristotle , or the Fathers ; to read nature through books ; to talk of what great geniuses had said ; to study the opinions of others as the only mode of form- ing their own ; to criticise , to interpret , to imitate , to dispute . The ...
... Aristotle , or the Fathers ; to read nature through books ; to talk of what great geniuses had said ; to study the opinions of others as the only mode of form- ing their own ; to criticise , to interpret , to imitate , to dispute . The ...
Pagina 131
... Aristotle , on the contrary , taught Nominalism , the doctrine that only individuals exist in reality , - that abstract ideas are nothing but abstractions , general names , not general things . Of the Scholastic Nominalists , Roscelin ...
... Aristotle , on the contrary , taught Nominalism , the doctrine that only individuals exist in reality , - that abstract ideas are nothing but abstractions , general names , not general things . Of the Scholastic Nominalists , Roscelin ...
Pagina 133
... Aristotle , knowledge - and preeminently knowledge of God - is the supreme end of life . The Divine existence is demonstrable only a posteriori , namely , from the contemplation of the world as the work of God . The order of the world ...
... Aristotle , knowledge - and preeminently knowledge of God - is the supreme end of life . The Divine existence is demonstrable only a posteriori , namely , from the contemplation of the world as the work of God . The order of the world ...
Pagina 134
... Aristotle , the Apostles , and the Fathers , gave the prem- ises ; ingenuity piled up cathedrals of conclusion . What more agreeable exercise to speculative minds than tracing the conse- quences of assumed principles ? It is deductive ...
... Aristotle , the Apostles , and the Fathers , gave the prem- ises ; ingenuity piled up cathedrals of conclusion . What more agreeable exercise to speculative minds than tracing the conse- quences of assumed principles ? It is deductive ...
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Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Development of English Literature and Language, Volumele 1-2 Alfred Hix Welsh Vizualizare completă - 1899 |
Development of English Literature and Language, Volumele 1-2 Alfred Hix Welsh Vizualizare completă - 1882 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Anglo-Saxon Aristotle beauty breath Britons burning Cædmon called Celts century character Chaucer Christian Church dark death Deism delight divine doth dream earth England English English language eternal eyes fair faith fancy father feeling fire flowers genius glory grace hand happy hath hear heart heaven Henry VIII hope human Iago ideas imagination immortal intellectual Italy king lady language Latin learned less light literary literature live look Lord manner marriage Mephistophilis mind moral nation nature never night noble Odin Othello passed passion Petrarch philosophy Plato pleasure poems poet poetic poetry Pope Puritan religion religious rich Roman Rome Saxon says Scholasticism sentiment Shakespeare sing soul spirit stars style sweet taste thee things thou thought thousand tion truth verse virtue voice Whig wife words write