The Cambridge History of English Literature, Volume 14Sir Adolphus William Ward, Alfred Rayney Waller G.P. Putnam's sons, 1917 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 1
... important practical consequence can follow.1 About the same time , or a few years earlier , similar views con- cerning the low estate of English philosophy had been expressed by Sir William Hamilton and by Thomas Carlyle ; and a foreign ...
... important practical consequence can follow.1 About the same time , or a few years earlier , similar views con- cerning the low estate of English philosophy had been expressed by Sir William Hamilton and by Thomas Carlyle ; and a foreign ...
Page 7
... important distinction between the muscular sense and touch proper , resolved knowledge of extension into a succession of muscular sensations , and knowledge of the external world into a number of constituent sensations , but held ...
... important distinction between the muscular sense and touch proper , resolved knowledge of extension into a succession of muscular sensations , and knowledge of the external world into a number of constituent sensations , but held ...
Page 8
... important of these were three articles on " the Philosophy of the Unconditioned , " " the Philosophy of Perception " and " Logic , " which appeared between 1829 and 1833. He afterwards devoted himself to the preparation of an edition of ...
... important of these were three articles on " the Philosophy of the Unconditioned , " " the Philosophy of Perception " and " Logic , " which appeared between 1829 and 1833. He afterwards devoted himself to the preparation of an edition of ...
Page 9
... important medium ; he brought into English literature ideas which had been derived from Kant and his successors , and he was recognised by John Stuart Mill as representing a type of thought , antagonistic to the dominant Benthamism ...
... important medium ; he brought into English literature ideas which had been derived from Kant and his successors , and he was recognised by John Stuart Mill as representing a type of thought , antagonistic to the dominant Benthamism ...
Page 13
... important problem . " To obviate misapprehension , " he asserts that all that we know is " those phases of being which stand in analogy to our faculties of knowledge . " This vague phrase may mean little more than that we cannot know ...
... important problem . " To obviate misapprehension , " he asserts that all that we know is " those phases of being which stand in analogy to our faculties of knowledge . " This vague phrase may mean little more than that we cannot know ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
2nd edn afterwards Anglo-Indian Australia Australian Australian poetry Ballads bibliography biography British Calcutta Cambridge Canada Chap Charles criticism Dublin earl early Edinburgh Edinburgh Review edited Edward eighteenth century English literature Essays France French George George Cruikshank Henry historian History of England History of India History of Scotland illustrated India influence instruction Ireland Irish James James Mill John Journal knowledge Lady language later edns Lectures Letters literary London Lord lyric Magazine Melbourne Memoirs ment Middle English modern moral narrative nature newspapers nineteenth century novels original Orpington Oxford Pamphleteer paper period Philosophy Philosophy of Perception poems poet Poetical poetry political popular principles prose published reform Review Robert Rptd Ruskin Sam Slick schools Scottish Sketches society speech story Sydney theory Thomas thought tion Toronto translated Travels verse vols volume voyage weekly William words writers written wrote