Language and Reality in Swift's A Tale of a TubOhio State University Press, 1979 - 172 páginas |
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Página 24
... Human Sciences , trans . Richard Howard ( New York , 1970 ) , p . 43 . 5. I echo James Knowlson , Universal Language Schemes in England and France , 1600-1800 ( Toronto , 1975 ) , p . 34 ; Knowlson's book is a welcome addition to the ...
... Human Sciences , trans . Richard Howard ( New York , 1970 ) , p . 43 . 5. I echo James Knowlson , Universal Language Schemes in England and France , 1600-1800 ( Toronto , 1975 ) , p . 34 ; Knowlson's book is a welcome addition to the ...
Página 115
... human understanding . What begins as a minor point becomes for the Modern a subject equal to his real subject . Notice how he uses weather metaphors for describing human beings ( " to water the Invention , and render it fruitful " ) as ...
... human understanding . What begins as a minor point becomes for the Modern a subject equal to his real subject . Notice how he uses weather metaphors for describing human beings ( " to water the Invention , and render it fruitful " ) as ...
Página 138
... Human Understand- ing devotes an entire chapter to " The Degrees of Our Knowledge " and another to " The Extent of Human Knowledge . " With Locke Swift questions the assumption that reason can locate verifiable , fixed , certain ...
... Human Understand- ing devotes an entire chapter to " The Degrees of Our Knowledge " and another to " The Extent of Human Knowledge . " With Locke Swift questions the assumption that reason can locate verifiable , fixed , certain ...
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Términos y frases comunes
analogy appears argues argument attempts attention Author becomes body brothers cadences calls century cites colloquial common concerning context course criticism describe Dictionary discussion effect elsewhere English Essay example experience fact force formal gives Glossary Guthkelch hand human ideas imagination implies important instances interest ironic John Jonathan knowledge language Latin Learning Letter lexical linguistic literal Locke logic London madness matter meaning metaphor mind Modern Modern's Nature neologisms never objects Oxford paradox paragraph passage perhaps person philosophical phrase Polite possible Practice Prose puns reader reality reason reference Rhetoric rhythm satire says schizophrenic seems sense sentence seventeenth seventeenth-century shows Smith sometimes sort sound speaks speech Studies style suggests Swift syntax Tale term things thinking thought tion truth turn Understanding University whereas whole words writing York
Referencias a este libro
Brain, Mind and Medicine:: Essays in Eighteenth-Century Neuroscience Harry Whitaker,C.U.M. Smith,Stanley Finger Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |
Common Courtesy in Eighteenth-century English Literature William Bowman Piper Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |