The Modern Temper: A Study and a Confession"A study of the various tendencies in contemporary thought and a confession of the mood which submission to these tendencies has engendered.". |
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Page 7
... imagination is always the creature of desire . II The world which any consciousness inhabits is a world made up in part of experience and in part of fancy . No experience , and hence no knowledge , is complete , but the gaps which lie ...
... imagination is always the creature of desire . II The world which any consciousness inhabits is a world made up in part of experience and in part of fancy . No experience , and hence no knowledge , is complete , but the gaps which lie ...
Page 89
... imagination has created it , how much more conspicuously is it true that we must regard as purely a creation of the human mind so complex a system of emotional atti- tudes - interwoven with all sorts of esthetic so- ciological and ...
... imagination has created it , how much more conspicuously is it true that we must regard as purely a creation of the human mind so complex a system of emotional atti- tudes - interwoven with all sorts of esthetic so- ciological and ...
Page 127
... imagination , leaves less and less room in which that imagination can build its refuge . III It is , indeed , only at a certain 127 The Tragic Fallacy.
... imagination , leaves less and less room in which that imagination can build its refuge . III It is , indeed , only at a certain 127 The Tragic Fallacy.
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Common terms and phrases
accept achieve animal artist assume atheism aware become believe Benvenuto Cellini Bertrand Russell biological called capable certitudes character Comedy completely concerned conclusions consciousness considered contemporary desire despair developed discovered doubtless effort emotions esthetic ethics exactly existence experience fact faith feel fictions fundamental G. K. Chesterton Gnostics hence Henry James hero hope human spirit Huxley illusion imagination important individual inevitably instincts intellectual JOSEPH WOOD KRUTCH justify knowledge least less live logical longer lost for love love complex means ment merely metaphysics mind modern moral moral nihilism nature never once Othello passions perhaps philosopher physical play possible principles problems purely purpose race reality realize realm reason religion result revealed rôle Roman scientific scientist seems sense sexual Shakespeare society Sophocles soul T. S. Eliot tendencies theory things Thomas Henry Huxley thought tion tragedy truth ultimate universe virtues word