The House of EmersonUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1982 - 272 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 23
76 psl.
... invention , by which he meant the acquisition of the necessary technical and scientific knowledge and the ability to ... inventions , machines , and the coming of age of the sciences increasingly dominated the thoughts of artists ...
... invention , by which he meant the acquisition of the necessary technical and scientific knowledge and the ability to ... inventions , machines , and the coming of age of the sciences increasingly dominated the thoughts of artists ...
77 psl.
... invention in nineteenth - century Britain and America alone would require more pages than a history of technology for these years . And most of our modern sciences - botany , zoology , chemistry , astronomy and astrophysics ...
... invention in nineteenth - century Britain and America alone would require more pages than a history of technology for these years . And most of our modern sciences - botany , zoology , chemistry , astronomy and astrophysics ...
86 psl.
... inventions enhance the environment in its ministry to man . A machine is the wit and will of man combined with the will ... invention to be as natural as language , art , and nature itself . A technological world need not be a horrible ...
... inventions enhance the environment in its ministry to man . A machine is the wit and will of man combined with the will ... invention to be as natural as language , art , and nature itself . A technological world need not be a horrible ...
Turinys
Preface page | 11 |
Acknowledgments page | 19 |
Emersons Epistemology page | 25 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 4
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
achievement action American appears argument artist become beginning building chapter Circles concentration conclusion context continual creates critical culture Days described discussion early Emer Emerson entry essay Experience expression fact fate final force hand human ideal images important individual intellect interest invention journals kind language later lecture less literary live machine man's means metamorphosis metaphor method mind mode Nature never noted objects observation once paragraph passage perhaps persona poem poet poetry possible practical present Press problem progression prospects reader reason reference relation reminder representative respect rhetorical scholars seems sense shift soul speaker Sphinx spirit statement structure suggests things thinking Thoreau thought tion transformation true truth turn understand University vision voice Webster writings