Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 8British Academy - Humanities |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 84
Page 189
... fact that a race supposed to be prosaic has produced a poetical literature unsurpassed in splendour . The conclusion is manifest : in face of the indubitable fact the supposition must be abandoned . Whether we can explain superficial ...
... fact that a race supposed to be prosaic has produced a poetical literature unsurpassed in splendour . The conclusion is manifest : in face of the indubitable fact the supposition must be abandoned . Whether we can explain superficial ...
Page 302
... facts with emotions , and adds images to words . This synthetic and transitive function of conscious- ness is a positive fact about it , to be discovered by study , like any other somewhat recondite fact . You will discover it if you ...
... facts with emotions , and adds images to words . This synthetic and transitive function of conscious- ness is a positive fact about it , to be discovered by study , like any other somewhat recondite fact . You will discover it if you ...
Page 340
... fact - life , mind , consciousness , reality - is known in its immediacy in being experienced , in being lived . We cannot take and analyse this psychical duration , form ideas or particular concepts of the separate facts which seem to ...
... fact - life , mind , consciousness , reality - is known in its immediacy in being experienced , in being lived . We cannot take and analyse this psychical duration , form ideas or particular concepts of the separate facts which seem to ...
Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS THE NEXT THIRTY YEARS BY THE RIGHT | 1 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191617 | 33 |
ANNUAL REPORT FOR 191718 | 51 |
27 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Academy aglaophotis Alberic II Alcibiades ancient appears Arabic authority beauty Beethoven believe Benedict Benedict IX British Caesar called Caswallon century character Charmides conception consciousness count of Tusculum death dialogue doctrine Elected England English evidence expression fact German give Gratian Greek Gregory Gregory VI Henry Hildebrand human idea ideal Italy John King later less literature living Lord Luke mandrake Marozia means mind modern nature Nennius never original Papacy Papal perhaps Persian Phaedo philosophy plant Plato poem poetic poetry poets pontificate Pope present Prince Professor Protagoras question Raleigh reality relation represented righteousness Roman Rome Savoy Saxons seems sense Shakespeare Silvester III Socrates Sophroniscus soul speak spirit statement story suisse supposed theory things thought tion tradition true truth Tysilio verse Vortigern whole word writing Xanthippe Xenophon