The Summing Up |
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Page 216
... evil and the meaning of reality , unless you are a mathematical physicist , as that you cannot enjoy a bottle of wine unless you have the trained sensi- bility that enables you without error to ascribe a year to twenty different clarets ...
... evil and the meaning of reality , unless you are a mathematical physicist , as that you cannot enjoy a bottle of wine unless you have the trained sensi- bility that enables you without error to ascribe a year to twenty different clarets ...
Page 233
... evil is logically neces- sary so that we may know good ; some say that by the nature of the world there is an opposition between good and evil and that each is metaphysically necessary to the other . What explana- tions have the ...
... evil is logically neces- sary so that we may know good ; some say that by the nature of the world there is an opposition between good and evil and that each is metaphysically necessary to the other . What explana- tions have the ...
Page 235
... evil of the world then forces on us the conclusion that this being cannot be all - powerful and all - good . A God who is all - powerful may be justly blamed for the evil of the world and it seems absurd to consider him with admiration ...
... evil of the world then forces on us the conclusion that this being cannot be all - powerful and all - good . A God who is all - powerful may be justly blamed for the evil of the world and it seems absurd to consider him with admiration ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept action actors admire æsthetic amusing appearance artist asked audience beauty believe Bertrand Russell better character Chekov comedy common conscious course critic deal death delight dialogue discover drama dramatist effect emotion English evil excited existence experience fact feel fiction forced French gave George Meredith Gerald du Maurier gift give Goethe Henry Arthur Jones Human Bondage human nature humour ideas idiosyncrasy imagination important instinct interest knew Kuno Fischer Lady Frederick literature live Liza of Lambeth longer look matter Matthew Arnold meaning mind never notion novel novelist one's pattern perhaps persons philosophers phrase picture play pleasure produced prose reader reason rococo seemed sense sometimes sort soul spirit Stendhal story success suppose tell theatre things thought tion told truth verse Walter Pater wanted words write written wrote young youth