Plato and MiltonCornell University Press, 1965 - 182 páginas |
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Página 21
... admiration for Plato . What that knowledge and enthusiasm meant in his own thought and writing as yet has hardly been probed . For put Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained to the same test as we earlier put Comus , and we get a different ...
... admiration for Plato . What that knowledge and enthusiasm meant in his own thought and writing as yet has hardly been probed . For put Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained to the same test as we earlier put Comus , and we get a different ...
Página 37
... admiration for their views , and Plotinus he does not even mention . At the same time , however little interest he may have ex- pressed in Plotinus , Milton had much in common with the Cambridge group . In a study of the Platonic ...
... admiration for their views , and Plotinus he does not even mention . At the same time , however little interest he may have ex- pressed in Plotinus , Milton had much in common with the Cambridge group . In a study of the Platonic ...
Página 54
... admiration in all the changes of that which is called fortune from without , or the wily subtleties and refluxes of man's thoughts from within ; all these things with a solid and treatable smoothness to paint out and describe— teaching ...
... admiration in all the changes of that which is called fortune from without , or the wily subtleties and refluxes of man's thoughts from within ; all these things with a solid and treatable smoothness to paint out and describe— teaching ...
Contenido
Milton as a Student of Plato | 3 |
Academics Old and New | 27 |
Himself a True Poem | 45 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Academic Adam Agar Apology for Smectymnuus appetite Areopagitica argument Aristotle Athenaeus Athenian Augustine beauty better Cambridge Platonists censorship Christian Church-Gov Comus Critias delight desire Dialogues Diodati Diogenes Laertius Diotima divine doctrine Downham ethical evil faith fame glory happiness hath Heaven heavenly Herbert Agar highest honor human important Jesus John Milton judgment Justice knowl knowledge Laws learning Milton and Plato mind moral myth nature Neoplatonic pagan Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passim perfect Phaedo Phaedrus philosophers Plato and Milton Platonic Idea Platonists pleasure Plotinus poems poet poetic poetry praise Prolusion Protagoras Raphael reader realm Reason of Church-Government references Republic Samson Agonistes Satan Smect Smectymnuus Socrates Sophist soul Spenser spirit Symposium taught teaching thee theory things thir thou thought Tillyard Timaeus tion Tractate true truth universal virtue wealth whole wisdom wise wisest words Xenophon