Bottom: on Shakespeare, Band 1the] Ark Press [for the Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, 1963 - 472 Seiten |
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Seite 21
... express , the more perfect they are . For we do not admire the architect who planned a chapel so much as the architect who planned some great temple . 109. The remaining things which are referred to thought , such as love , pleasure ...
... express , the more perfect they are . For we do not admire the architect who planned a chapel so much as the architect who planned some great temple . 109. The remaining things which are referred to thought , such as love , pleasure ...
Seite 56
... express . As Wittgenstein explained , that one person would understand and read them with pleasure was incentive enough to get them going . They are often tempers for whom at least one dead person has never died , because that person ...
... express . As Wittgenstein explained , that one person would understand and read them with pleasure was incentive enough to get them going . They are often tempers for whom at least one dead person has never died , because that person ...
Seite 89
... express by language . The propositions show the logical form of reality ' ( Tractatus , 4.121 ) . With respect then to the wholeness reached by eyes , or thought , or words : just as we cannot think that we cannot think and cannot ...
... express by language . The propositions show the logical form of reality ' ( Tractatus , 4.121 ) . With respect then to the wholeness reached by eyes , or thought , or words : just as we cannot think that we cannot think and cannot ...
Inhalt
PREFACE | 9 |
notes for Her music to Pericles and for a graph of culture | 33 |
Abomb and H | 97 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action affect appears Aristotle beauty beginning believe better blind body called cause character clear death definition desire doth dream ears earth existence express eyes face fact father feeling follow give Greek green Hamlet hand hath head hear heart human idea imagination KING knowledge language later learned less light lines live logic look Love's matter means mind move nature never night object once perhaps Pericles philosopher play pleasure poet present question reason seems seen sense shadow Shakespeare sight simple sing sometimes song Sonnet soul sound speak stand sweet tell thee things thou thought tongue translated true truth turn understanding voice whole wish wonder writing
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