Fictions of Reality in the Age of Hume and JohnsonUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1989 - 262 من الصفحات During the second half of the 18th century the most powerful literary work in Britain was nonfictional - philosophy, history, biography, and political controversy, Leo Damrosch argues that this tendency is no accident; at the beginning of the modern age, writers were consciously aware of the role of cultural fictions, and they sought to ground those fictions in a real world beyond the text. Their political conservatism was a considered response to a world in which meaning was inseparable from consensus, and in which consensus was increasingly under attack. |
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الصفحة 31
... argument , ' I think therefore I am . ' It is as good a consequence ' I write therefore I am alive ' " ( Letters 1:80 ) . But the essayist , unlike the private letter writer , strives to speak with and for the entire community , knowing ...
... argument , ' I think therefore I am . ' It is as good a consequence ' I write therefore I am alive ' " ( Letters 1:80 ) . But the essayist , unlike the private letter writer , strives to speak with and for the entire community , knowing ...
الصفحة 131
... argument against particular beliefs , but as a dramatization of the ways in which beliefs are entertained and defended . Religious belief in the seventeenth century was generally fideistic , most famously in the " wager " or leap of ...
... argument against particular beliefs , but as a dramatization of the ways in which beliefs are entertained and defended . Religious belief in the seventeenth century was generally fideistic , most famously in the " wager " or leap of ...
الصفحة 140
... arguments can be found to support any position , and that no argument will overcome entrenched resistance . Hume remarks in the Treatise , " Belief is more properly an act of the sensitive , than of the cogitative part of our natures ...
... arguments can be found to support any position , and that no argument will overcome entrenched resistance . Hume remarks in the Treatise , " Belief is more properly an act of the sensitive , than of the cogitative part of our natures ...
المحتوى
Texts and Their Realities | 3 |
Fictions of Self and World | 16 |
Life as Art | 66 |
حقوق النشر | |
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Abu Moslem appear argument assumptions authority believe Boswell Boswell's Burke Burke's Caleb Williams century character Christian claims Cleanthes common consensus conservatism context culture Decline and Fall Demea doubt eighteenth eighteenth-century emotional empiricism empiricist Essays existence experience fact Falkland feeling fiction French Revolution Gibbon Gilbert White Godwin historian human Hume and Johnson Hume's Humean ideal ideas ideology imagination India individual invention Johnson and Hume Johnson says kind language literary live London Journal Marc Bloch means metaphor mind modern moral narrative nation nature never novel objects observes opinion passions past perceive Philo philosophical Political Justice present principles psychological Rambler Rasselas readers reality reason Reflections religion religious remarks rhetoric role Roman Samuel Johnson scene seems Selborne sense skepticism social social fictions society speech story Tacitus texts thing thought tion Tom Jones traditional Treatise truth Visigoth Whigs White whole words writing