Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 1British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 12
... regard to subjects in which it is more directly interested than any other . We shall now , however , be able to prove that we are keenly sensible of our responsibility . In History we have to deal with the mutual interaction of ...
... regard to subjects in which it is more directly interested than any other . We shall now , however , be able to prove that we are keenly sensible of our responsibility . In History we have to deal with the mutual interaction of ...
Page 141
... regard to his text is provided by the extant papyri , and to indicate what the general bearing of that evidence is ; and then it may be possible to sum up the results and to arrive at some general conclusions with regard to the extent ...
... regard to his text is provided by the extant papyri , and to indicate what the general bearing of that evidence is ; and then it may be possible to sum up the results and to arrive at some general conclusions with regard to the extent ...
Page 150
... regard to the Homeric poems in general , since their textual history is necessarily on a different footing from that of the other classical writers , it may be said broadly that the papyri have introduced no new element into the ...
... regard to the Homeric poems in general , since their textual history is necessarily on a different footing from that of the other classical writers , it may be said broadly that the papyri have introduced no new element into the ...
Contents
SECOND ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING JUNE 29 1904 ADDRESS | 17 |
THE FERMENT IN EDUCATION ON THE CONTINENT AND IN AMERICA | 81 |
IDEALISM AND THE THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE BY EDWARD CAIRD | 95 |
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