 | Hannah Arendt - Philosophy - 1968 - 272 pages
...humane just because the human voice sounds in it, but only when it has become the object of discourse. However much we are affected by the things of the...us only when we can discuss them with our fellows. Whatever cannot become the object of discourse — the truly sublime, the truly horrible or the uncanny... | |
 | Gotthold Ephraim Lessing - Literary Criticism - 1991 - 335 pages
...humane just because the human voice sounds in it, but only when it has become the object of discourse. However much we are affected by the things of the...us only when we can discuss them with our fellows. Whatever cannot become the object of discourse — the truly sublime, the truly horrible or the uncanny... | |
 | Andrew Garrod - Education - 1992 - 271 pages
...humane just because the human voice sounds in it, but only when it has become the object of discourse. However much we are affected by the things of the...fellows. . . . We humanize what is going on in the world and in ourselves only by speaking of it, and in the course of speaking of it we learn to be human.... | |
 | William M. Tuttle Jr. - Social Science - 1993 - 384 pages
...the political importance of friendship, and the humaneness peculiar to it, were made manifest. . . . However much we are affected by the things of the...fellows We humanize what is going on in the world and in ourselves only by speaking of it, and in the course of speaking of it we learn to be human."6... | |
 | Philip Langdon - Architecture - 1997 - 270 pages
...odds with the prevailing official or commercial messages. Hannah Arendt wrote insightfully about this. "However much we are affected by the things of the...us only when we can discuss them with our fellows," she said "We humanize what is going on in the world and in ourselves oniy by speaking of it, and in... | |
 | David Halliburton - Literary Criticism - 1997 - 428 pages
...humane just because the human voice sounds in it, but only when it has become the object of discourse. However much we are affected by the things of the...human for us only when we can discuss them with our fellows.57 The things discoursed of may be said to be all things, any one of which may equally be said... | |
 | Samuel Totten - Education - 2003 - 216 pages
...humane just because the human voice sounds in it, but only when it has become the subject of discourse. However much we are affected by the things of the...us only when we can discuss them with our fellows" (p. 2). Jacob Bronowski, a philosopher, is another of my "virtual teachers." In his extraordinary TV... | |
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