Frontiers of Consciousness: Interdisciplinary Studies in American Philosophy and PoetryFordham University Press, 1991 - 156 psl. Frontiers of Consciousness is a study of the problem of consciousness in a historic period of revolutionary change, and an authentic example of "interdisciplinary studies." The book contains a wealth of insight into the conceptual interrelationships between the work of the American philosophers who have been called the Builders (William James, Josiah Royce, Charles Peirce, and John Dewey) and the work of three great modernist poets (T. S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and William Carlos Williams). |
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77 psl.
... means , to penetrate more completely into the given , and thus to find in fact the true nature of being in its wholeness - a unity of experience that the Cartesian tradition had split apart into a reified material realm and a hazy ( but ...
... means , to penetrate more completely into the given , and thus to find in fact the true nature of being in its wholeness - a unity of experience that the Cartesian tradition had split apart into a reified material realm and a hazy ( but ...
85 psl.
... means " to find the real , " for reality to Stevens is above all the " fluent mundo " ( CP 407 ) that must be grasped in its " living changingness " ( CP 380 ) . " To find / Not to impose " means " not to have reasoned at all , " where ...
... means " to find the real , " for reality to Stevens is above all the " fluent mundo " ( CP 407 ) that must be grasped in its " living changingness " ( CP 380 ) . " To find / Not to impose " means " not to have reasoned at all , " where ...
109 psl.
... means the " radiant gist " that lies immanent though hidden in the things of ordinary experience . By his own account , Williams's poetics grows out of his sense of immediate experience . His earliest articulated theory , which we may ...
... means the " radiant gist " that lies immanent though hidden in the things of ordinary experience . By his own account , Williams's poetics grows out of his sense of immediate experience . His earliest articulated theory , which we may ...
Turinys
T S Eliot and American | 36 |
William James and the Arts | 55 |
Wallace Stevens | 74 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 4
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
aesthetic American philosophers argues articulate aspects basic called Cambridge Carbondale and Edwardsville Cartesian paradigm cognitive conception context contextualist creative critical culture Descartes Descartes's Dewey's dualism empirical empiricist ence epistemological existence experiential F. H. Bradley fact field finite Fredson Bowers Harvard University Press Hocking human Ibid idea Illinois University Press imagination interaction interpretation intuition involves James's John Dewey Josiah Royce knowing meaning mental metaphor Metaphysics mind modern modernist poetry nature organized participation Paterson Peirce Peirce's perceived perception perspective philosophy poem poet poetic poetry point of view Pragmatism principle problem pure experience radical empiricism rational reader reality relation Richard Rorty Ronald Gregor Smith Rorty Royce Royce's sense Southern Illinois University standpoint Stevens's structure subject and object subjectivism T. S. Eliot theory things thinking thought tion Tiresias tradition truth unity Wallace Stevens William Carlos Williams William James Williams's words York