Thomas Carlyle and the Art of History |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 50
Page 28
... Schiller he echoes in the theory and practice of historical writings and in his conception of the historian's mission . Striking dissimilarities exist , of course , because while Schiller's approach to historical materials made him a ...
... Schiller he echoes in the theory and practice of historical writings and in his conception of the historian's mission . Striking dissimilarities exist , of course , because while Schiller's approach to historical materials made him a ...
Page 29
... Schiller , Goethe and the rest . They are the greatest men at present with me . " 58 Schiller impressed him much more deeply than Goethe in this early period . He urged his new acquaintance , Jane Welsh , to read Schiller and Goethe so ...
... Schiller , Goethe and the rest . They are the greatest men at present with me . " 58 Schiller impressed him much more deeply than Goethe in this early period . He urged his new acquaintance , Jane Welsh , to read Schiller and Goethe so ...
Page 36
... Schiller borrowed his teleological principle from Kant and indirectly from Hume . Carlyle was unimpressed by it because of its essentially rational character . Carlyle did derive from Schiller , however , the useful idea of history as a ...
... Schiller borrowed his teleological principle from Kant and indirectly from Hume . Carlyle was unimpressed by it because of its essentially rational character . Carlyle did derive from Schiller , however , the useful idea of history as a ...
Contents
CHAPTER PAGE | 1 |
BACKGROUNDS ΙΟ | 10 |
CARLYLES PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY | 54 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action appearance artist become believed biographic Burke called Carlyle Carlyle's century character Coleridge complete conception considered constitute critical Cromwell Divine early effect element Emerson English essay existence experience expression fact final force French Revolution fundamental give Goethe hand heart Herder hero historian human idea imagination important individual influence institutions intellectual interest interpretation later laws less Letters literary literature living London man's materials matter means merely method mind Misc moral mystery nature never object opinion organism original past period personality philosophy poet poetry political position possessed practical present primary principles Professor qualities reader reality reason record represented romantic Sartor Schiller scientific seems sense significance social society soul spiritual subjective theory things thought tion true truth turn understanding universal volume whole writing written wrote