Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 8British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 97
... regarded as fantastic notions about the soul and the unseen world . From a later notice in the Birds ( 1553 ff . ) we may infer that these notions were of such a kind that it was within the limits of legitimate parody to represent ...
... regarded as fantastic notions about the soul and the unseen world . From a later notice in the Birds ( 1553 ff . ) we may infer that these notions were of such a kind that it was within the limits of legitimate parody to represent ...
Page 280
... regarded as the result of spirit action . Rivers , plants , and stars , the earth and air and heavens , became full of souls , of gods , each of them in fashion as a man , and with the passions of a man . The matter was perfectly clear ...
... regarded as the result of spirit action . Rivers , plants , and stars , the earth and air and heavens , became full of souls , of gods , each of them in fashion as a man , and with the passions of a man . The matter was perfectly clear ...
Page 337
... regarded under two heads : either , sensations are regarded and treated as a definite species of object , or , they are regarded as sub- jective modes of apprehension . In the first case they are distinguished from their conditions ...
... regarded under two heads : either , sensations are regarded and treated as a definite species of object , or , they are regarded as sub- jective modes of apprehension . In the first case they are distinguished from their conditions ...
Contents
Presidential ADDRESS | 1 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191617 | 33 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191718 | 51 |
Copyright | |
29 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academy Alberic Alberic II Alcibiades ancient appears Arabic authority believe Benedict Benedict IX British Caesar called Caswallon century character chronicle conception consciousness count of Tusculum death doctrine documents Elected England English evidence expression fact Geoffrey German give Gratian Greek Gregory Gregory VI Henry Hildebrand human idea ideal Imperial Italy John King language later literature living Lord Luke mandrake Marozia means mind modern nature Nennius never original Papacy Papal perhaps period Persian Phaedo philosophy Plato poem poetic poetry poets political pontificate Pope present Prince Professor question Raleigh reality relation religion represented righteousness Roman Rome Savoy Saxons seems sensations sense Shakespeare Silvester III Socrates Sophroniscus soul spirit suisse Sutri theory things thought tion tradition true truth Tysilio verse Vortigern whole words writing written Xenophon