The Teachers of EmersonSturgis & Walton, 1910 - 325 páginas This book is about the influence of Greek philosophy on Ralph Waldo Emerson's writings. John S. Harrison argues that Emerson primarily drew his inspiration from Greek thought and not German/Eastern teachings. |
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Página 7
... explaining his concep- tion of Platonism . For the man whose life labors made possi- ble the enjoyment of these obscure philoso- phers Emerson has the highest praise . " There are also prose poets , " he writes . " Thomas Taylor , the ...
... explaining his concep- tion of Platonism . For the man whose life labors made possi- ble the enjoyment of these obscure philoso- phers Emerson has the highest praise . " There are also prose poets , " he writes . " Thomas Taylor , the ...
Página 8
... explains is the highest reality . Thus Thomas Taylor , reflecting their method of criticism , writes : " Of all the dogmas of Plato , that concerning the first principle of things as far transcends in sublimity the doctrine of other ...
... explains is the highest reality . Thus Thomas Taylor , reflecting their method of criticism , writes : " Of all the dogmas of Plato , that concerning the first principle of things as far transcends in sublimity the doctrine of other ...
Página 20
... explains the categories of the reason and shows how all propositions are reduced to one proposition ; " that is , to the opposition between unity and plurality , substance and phenomenon , being 3 1 Ibid . , II . , 432-433 . 2 Complete ...
... explains the categories of the reason and shows how all propositions are reduced to one proposition ; " that is , to the opposition between unity and plurality , substance and phenomenon , being 3 1 Ibid . , II . , 432-433 . 2 Complete ...
Página 21
... explains that these two fundamental ideas are " two ideas contemporaneous in reason ; two , which reason cannot be without , and which moreover arrive at the same time . " 2 One cannot be conceived - he adds - without the other . It is ...
... explains that these two fundamental ideas are " two ideas contemporaneous in reason ; two , which reason cannot be without , and which moreover arrive at the same time . " 2 One cannot be conceived - he adds - without the other . It is ...
Página 25
... him . " I think the Platonists may be read for sentences , " he explains , " though the reader fails to grasp the argu- 1 Complete Works , I. , 89-90 . ment of the paragraph or chapter . He may yet EMERSON'S PLATONISM 25.
... him . " I think the Platonists may be read for sentences , " he explains , " though the reader fails to grasp the argu- 1 Complete Works , I. , 89-90 . ment of the paragraph or chapter . He may yet EMERSON'S PLATONISM 25.
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Términos y frases comunes
according ancient appear Bacon beauty behold body Bohn translation called cause celestial love character Coleridge Coleridge's Complete conception correlation Cudworth Dæmonic dæmons divine doctrine earth Emer Emerson found Emerson's mind ence essay essence eternal evil explains eyes F. B. Sanborn fable Fate finds flux gods Hence Heraclitus highest Hindoo holds human Iamblichus Ibid idea ideal illusions imitation ineffable intel intellect intuition Kant light manner method of nature moral mystic experience Neo-Platonic Ocellus Lucanus oracle Over-Soul Parmenides passage Phædo Phædrus phantasy philosophy Platonists Plotinus Plutarch poem poet poetry principle Proclus pure Pythagorean Ralph Waldo Emerson reading reason relation Samuel Taylor Coleridge says Select soul speaks Sphinx spirit subsist symbol Synesius tains teaching Theology of Plato theory thinking Thomas Taylor thou thought Timæus of Plato tion True Intellectual System truth ture union Universal Mind vision whole writes