| W. P. Frith - 2006 - 532 str.
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| Brian M. Stableford - 2006 - 758 str.
...Shakespeare's grouping of "the lunatic, the lover and the poet" and John Dryden's observation that "Great wits are sure to madness near allied, /And thin partitions do their bounds divide" (1681) — is tantamount to an affirmation that some aberrations from the norm are socially and existentially... | |
| Rudolf Wittkower, Margot Wittkower - 2006 - 460 str.
...context, as it often was from the seventeenth century onwards, it suggested a different meaning. Dryden's Great wits are sure to madness near allied, And thin partitions do their bounds divide, and even Schopenhauer's 'genius is nearer to madness than the average intelligence' echo the misinterpreted... | |
| Alexander Pope - 2006 - 420 str.
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| the late Abraham Pais - 2006 - 397 str.
...in turn told it to me.) That behavior brings to mind the lines by the poet John Dryden (1631-1670): Great wits are sure to madness near allied, And thin partitions do their bounds divide. While in Europe, Oppenheimer sought help of at least two psychiatrists: In June of 1926 [he told an... | |
| Colin Pritchard - 2006 - 310 str.
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| Edmund Gosse - 2006 - 332 str.
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| Ahmed Hussain - 2006 - 100 str.
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