The Unwritten Philosophy and Other Essays |
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Page 3
No critic can overlook the philosophies of Auschylus , Sophocles , Euripides ; nor is there here any question of disentangling the philosophies in order to arrive at objective fact . The unconscious element in drama falls under two ...
No critic can overlook the philosophies of Auschylus , Sophocles , Euripides ; nor is there here any question of disentangling the philosophies in order to arrive at objective fact . The unconscious element in drama falls under two ...
Page 71
Socrates then opens with a conversational criticism of Agathon . By a masterstroke of delicate courtesy he avoids making his host look foolish . He pretends that he himself had spoken of Eros in similar terms to Diotima , a wise ...
Socrates then opens with a conversational criticism of Agathon . By a masterstroke of delicate courtesy he avoids making his host look foolish . He pretends that he himself had spoken of Eros in similar terms to Diotima , a wise ...
Page 95
The texts produced by higher critics , who have given rein to such suspicions , leave the impression that the poem consists mainly of interpolations , like a bad sponge consisting mostly of holes . They are approaching the point at ...
The texts produced by higher critics , who have given rein to such suspicions , leave the impression that the poem consists mainly of interpolations , like a bad sponge consisting mostly of holes . They are approaching the point at ...
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Contents
The Harmony of the Spheres 1930 | 14 |
The Unwritten Philosophy 1935 | 28 |
Platos Commonwealth 1935 | 47 |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract Aeschylus ancient answer appears Aristotle associations authority beauty become beginning believe birth bodies called century character city-state complete concepts cosmogony course Creation criticism death described desire divine doctrine earth element Eros event existence experience explain expression fact feeling finally follow force given gods Greek hand harmony heaven Hesiod human ideal ideas individual interest Ionian Italy king knowledge later lectures less light living look lovers material matter means mentioned mind moral myth mythical nature never object once origin perfect perhaps philosophy physical Plato political possible produce question reason Republic ritual seems sense separation social society Socrates soul space speaks theory things thought traditional true truth unconscious universe wealth whole wisdom writes Zeus