Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 9British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 113
... experience is referable as an object within the field of the very experience that is its own . That there should be degrees in our experience is necessitated for the same reason . We are finite and conditioned by the character of the ...
... experience is referable as an object within the field of the very experience that is its own . That there should be degrees in our experience is necessitated for the same reason . We are finite and conditioned by the character of the ...
Page 128
... experience , our consciousness of self , it is essentially activity in which there is as little of the merely direct ... experience of mankind . Now if that experience always points beyond itself , it points towards knowledge which must ...
... experience , our consciousness of self , it is essentially activity in which there is as little of the merely direct ... experience of mankind . Now if that experience always points beyond itself , it points towards knowledge which must ...
Page 273
... experience which they suggest to a human imagination . But where Croce argues at length 2 that such beauty , because ... experience varying relatively with the variation of conditions is an experience that 1 Breviario , pp . 60-1 . 2 ...
... experience which they suggest to a human imagination . But where Croce argues at length 2 that such beauty , because ... experience varying relatively with the variation of conditions is an experience that 1 Breviario , pp . 60-1 . 2 ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191819 | 19 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191920 | 31 |
THE VALUE AND THE METHODS OF MYTHOLOGIC STUDY By L | 37 |
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Academy Aeginetic standard aesthetic ancient Anglo-Saxon appears artist beauty British Brobdingnag bull Byron called Celtic century character cistophoric Cnossus coins commonplace Cretan Crete critics Croce Cydonia doctrine document drachms Drapier's Letters Elected England English experience expression fact feeling France Gortyna grammes Greek Gulliver Gulliver's Travels Hegel human Ibid imagination impressed seal interest intuition Ireland Irish island Italian Italy King knowledge Lacnunga language later Lectures Leonardo less letters Lord Lyttus magic means medicine method mind modern nations native nature never obverse original passage passion perhaps philosophy poem poet poetry political Professor race reality relations Rhodian Roman Roman Britain seal seems sense Shakespeare speak specimens spirit staters story Svoronos Swift tetradrachms things thought tion to-day tradition truth types verse Voyage weight whole wiĆ° Woden words Wordsworth writings written Yahoos