Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 105
... human imagination , " between what we can know of God , and what we can not know . " For this purpose he professes to explore the limits of human knowledge , and the human understanding . Having proven by an argument of his own , to his ...
... human imagination , " between what we can know of God , and what we can not know . " For this purpose he professes to explore the limits of human knowledge , and the human understanding . Having proven by an argument of his own , to his ...
Page 179
... human life and manners , not an analysis of human nature , nor a metaphysical anatomy of the human mind . And we have considered the only or the principal difference between a novel and a romance to be , that in the latter , the agency ...
... human life and manners , not an analysis of human nature , nor a metaphysical anatomy of the human mind . And we have considered the only or the principal difference between a novel and a romance to be , that in the latter , the agency ...
Page 501
... human nature and the gravity of the philosopher . Aristotle considers laughter the characteristic of the human race , but he invariably , and half unconsciously , strives to raise himself above humanity by crushing all outbursts of this ...
... human nature and the gravity of the philosopher . Aristotle considers laughter the characteristic of the human race , but he invariably , and half unconsciously , strives to raise himself above humanity by crushing all outbursts of this ...
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