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. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 19
Página 14
... refer- ence to the ancients and no opportunity is lost by Proclus to identify the teaching of the early schools with Platonism . And in Plato Emerson found a criticism that set the old thought in vivid contrast to Plato's own con ...
... refer- ence to the ancients and no opportunity is lost by Proclus to identify the teaching of the early schools with Platonism . And in Plato Emerson found a criticism that set the old thought in vivid contrast to Plato's own con ...
Página 19
... refers the story of the At- lantic war " to the opposition perpetually flourishing in the universe between unity and multitude , bound and infinity , sameness and difference , motion and permanency , from 1 The Works of Plato ...
... refers the story of the At- lantic war " to the opposition perpetually flourishing in the universe between unity and multitude , bound and infinity , sameness and difference , motion and permanency , from 1 The Works of Plato ...
Página 85
... refer to the first of the absolute principles of the Platon- ists , the One . In stating that in the Over- Soul every man's particular being is contained 1 Complete Works , II . , 268–269 . and made one with all other , he makes refer ...
... refer to the first of the absolute principles of the Platon- ists , the One . In stating that in the Over- Soul every man's particular being is contained 1 Complete Works , II . , 268–269 . and made one with all other , he makes refer ...
Página 86
John Smith Harrison. and made one with all other , he makes refer- ence to the conception of the supreme intellect , in which , according to Plotinus , all minds subsist together . " And they perceive them- selves in others , " Plotinus ...
John Smith Harrison. and made one with all other , he makes refer- ence to the conception of the supreme intellect , in which , according to Plotinus , all minds subsist together . " And they perceive them- selves in others , " Plotinus ...
Página 104
... refer than to the divine moments of intuition . The range of the intuition is a wide one ; it embraces at its highest ecstasy , trance , and prophetic inspiration , and at its lowest " the faintest glow of virtuous emo- tion . " 1 In ...
... refer than to the divine moments of intuition . The range of the intuition is a wide one ; it embraces at its highest ecstasy , trance , and prophetic inspiration , and at its lowest " the faintest glow of virtuous emo- tion . " 1 In ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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