The Harvard Classics, Volumen32Charles William Eliot P. F. Collier & son, 1910 |
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Página 255
... impulsions , which I shall call the sensuous instinct , issues from the physical existence of man , or from sensuous nature ; and it is this instinct which tends to enclose him in the limits of time and ESTHETIC EDUCATION 255.
... impulsions , which I shall call the sensuous instinct , issues from the physical existence of man , or from sensuous nature ; and it is this instinct which tends to enclose him in the limits of time and ESTHETIC EDUCATION 255.
Página 256
... impulsion has for its necessary consequence the narrowest limitation . In this state man is only a unity of magnitude , a complete moment in time ; or , to speak more correctly , he is not , for his personality is suppressed as long as ...
... impulsion has for its necessary consequence the narrowest limitation . In this state man is only a unity of magnitude , a complete moment in time ; or , to speak more correctly , he is not , for his personality is suppressed as long as ...
Página 257
... impulsion , which tends to maintain personality , can never exact in one time anything but what it exacts and requires for ever . It therefore decides for always what it decides now , and orders now what it orders for ever . Hence it ...
... impulsion , which tends to maintain personality , can never exact in one time anything but what it exacts and requires for ever . It therefore decides for always what it decides now , and orders now what it orders for ever . Hence it ...
Página 258
... impulsions ; one having for its object change , the other immutability , and yet it is these two notions that exhaust the notion of humanity , and a third fundamental impulsion , holding a medium between them , is quite incon- ceivable ...
... impulsions ; one having for its object change , the other immutability , and yet it is these two notions that exhaust the notion of humanity , and a third fundamental impulsion , holding a medium between them , is quite incon- ceivable ...
Página 259
... impulsion on the formal impul- sion , and convert the receptive into the determining power . He can attribute to the active force the extensiveness be- longing to the passive force , he can encroach by the formal impulsion on the ...
... impulsion on the formal impul- sion , and convert the receptive into the determining power . He can attribute to the active force the extensiveness be- longing to the passive force , he can encroach by the formal impulsion on the ...
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absolute action æsthetic appearance beauty become better Breton Brittany Byron categorical categorical imperative Celtic races Chrétien de Troyes classical conceived conception condition consequently Cymric death desire determination discourse divine doth duty effect empirical eternal existence faculty feeling force freedom genius Giraldus Cambrensis give Goethe happiness hath honour human idea ideal imagination imperative impulsion inclination individual infinite instinct judgment kingdom of ends knowledge korigans Lady Charlotte Guest liberty limits live Mabinogion matter maxim means mind Modron Molière Montaigne moral law necessary necessity never object objective laws pantheism Peredur perfect person philosophy physical Plato poetry poets possible practical principle priori pure rational reality reason regard respect Roman selfe sensuous soul speake spirit synthetic proposition taste things thou thought tion trouvères true truth understanding unity universal law unto whole words world of sense worth