An Examination of the Intellectual Premises Underlying the Religious, Political, and Social Criticism of Joseph Addison, Svazek 1University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1960 - Počet stran: 872 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 35
Strana 38
... readers to respect the voice of authority , he usually meant the authority of the ancients . He held that " there is nothing which more improves the mind of man , than the reading of ancient authors , when it is done with judgment and ...
... readers to respect the voice of authority , he usually meant the authority of the ancients . He held that " there is nothing which more improves the mind of man , than the reading of ancient authors , when it is done with judgment and ...
Strana 51
... readers already ac- cepted the message of revelation and needed no further per- suasion . Instead of bulwaking that belief with substantial argu- ment , Addison simply urged his readers to keep the faith . He emphasized that one ...
... readers already ac- cepted the message of revelation and needed no further per- suasion . Instead of bulwaking that belief with substantial argu- ment , Addison simply urged his readers to keep the faith . He emphasized that one ...
Strana 160
... readers and their practices . referred to dream - reading as one of the " pretended arts of divination " and insisted that dreams only had a prophetic value " sometimes , upon very extraordinary occasions " and then only as a source of ...
... readers and their practices . referred to dream - reading as one of the " pretended arts of divination " and insisted that dreams only had a prophetic value " sometimes , upon very extraordinary occasions " and then only as a source of ...
Obsah
The Components of Wisdom | 5 |
Atheism | 74 |
Criticism of Tories | 181 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 1 nejsou zobrazeny.
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
accept Addi Addison concluded Addison criticized Addison felt Addison found Addison saw Addison wrote Aenead ancients animal argued argument astrologer atheist authority believe Bonamy Dobrée C. S. Lewis Catholic Cato Christian church cited coffee-house common sense concern conjurer consider death discussed dison divine doctrines dream Drummer essays example existence fact factionalism Fox-hunter free-thinker Freeholder ghosts heaven human idea ignorance imagination infinite instinct intellectual Ironside Isaac Bickerstaff Jacobite Jesuits Joseph Addison kind knowledge lion live mankind ments mind Moll White morality nature Nestor Ironside never noted observed occasion opposed paper particular party persons philosophy pleasure political Pope Pope Joan Popery precedent prejudice Pretender principles promised proofs Quaker rational readers reason rebels referred reject religion religious revealed ridiculed Roman seemed self-interest senseless sensible Sir Roger soul Spanish monarchy Spectator speculation spirits superstition T. S. Eliot Tatler Tinsel tion Tory Trophonius truth virtue Whig wisdom witches writings