Ralph Waldo EmersonHarold Bloom Chelsea House, 2007 - 261 psl. Ralph Waldo Emerson was one of America's most influential thinkers. His essay, Nature is considered to be the founding document for the Transcendentalism movement, and his influence can be seen in the writings of Whitman, Thoreau, Melville, and countless others. A synthesis of the most relevant interpretations of Emerson and his work, this freshly updated edition offers a first-rate study guide on the 19th-century essayist and philosopher at a level of depth that will lend new insight and inspire research. |
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Rezultatai 1–3 iš 32
2 psl.
... ourselves while we go on fearing that we are nothing in ourselves . Emerson dismisses the fear , and insists upon the necessity of the single self achieving a total autonomy , of becoming a cosmos without first ingesting either nature ...
... ourselves while we go on fearing that we are nothing in ourselves . Emerson dismisses the fear , and insists upon the necessity of the single self achieving a total autonomy , of becoming a cosmos without first ingesting either nature ...
59 psl.
... ourselves and our knowledge of ourselves . Space , time and mortality flee away , to be replaced by " the knowing . " As always in Emerson , the knowing bruises a limit of language , and the impatient Seer transgresses in order to ...
... ourselves and our knowledge of ourselves . Space , time and mortality flee away , to be replaced by " the knowing . " As always in Emerson , the knowing bruises a limit of language , and the impatient Seer transgresses in order to ...
66 psl.
... ourselves ? In a series of which we do not know the extremes , and believe that it has none . We wake and find ourselves on a stair ; there are stairs below us , which we seem to have ascended ; there are stairs above us , many a one ...
... ourselves ? In a series of which we do not know the extremes , and believe that it has none . We wake and find ourselves on a stair ; there are stairs below us , which we seem to have ascended ; there are stairs above us , many a one ...
Turinys
The Question of Means | 15 |
The American Religion | 33 |
The Curse of Kehama | 63 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 7
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Abyss action American religion become called Carlyle claim Coleridge constitution criticism culture death detachment Divinity School Address Early Lectures Emerson says Emersonian Essays and Lectures existence experience fact faith Fate feel force freedom Freud Fugitive Slave Law genius Gnosis Gnostic grief Harold Bloom Heidegger hereafter abbreviated human idea ideal imagination individual intellect irony journal Kant language live means melancholia metaphor mind moods moral mourning nature never Nietzsche Nominalist object one's oneself Orpheus Orphic Orphism ourselves Over-soul pain paragraph Parfit passage perhaps personal identity philosophical Plotinus poem poet poetical poetry political question Ralph Waldo Ralph Waldo Emerson reader reform relation religious rhetoric Romantic sense sentence slavery society solitude soul speaking spirit Stanley Cavell sublime Swedenborgian T.S. Eliot things thinking Thoreau thought Threnody Transcendental Transcendentalist transition trope truth turn University vision voice Walt Whitman Webster Whicher Whitman whole words writing