Science and Literature: A ReaderJohn J. Cadden, Patrick R. Brostowin |
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Page 7
... true , must be true . And if their demonstrations fell short of or exceeded this limit , the Church was maternally ready to check their aberrations ; if need were , by the help of the secular arm . Between the two , our ancestors were ...
... true , must be true . And if their demonstrations fell short of or exceeded this limit , the Church was maternally ready to check their aberrations ; if need were , by the help of the secular arm . Between the two , our ancestors were ...
Page 38
... true child of the time will assure you , cannot be done . To the true child of abstraction you can't know apple as apple . You can't know tree as tree . You can't know man as man . All you can know is a world dissolved by analyzing ...
... true child of the time will assure you , cannot be done . To the true child of abstraction you can't know apple as apple . You can't know tree as tree . You can't know man as man . All you can know is a world dissolved by analyzing ...
Page 75
... true that Milton's outlook seems never to have been influenced by the post - Restoration and Royal Society atmosphere ; he had nothing about him of the " experimental philos- opher . " Indeed , his work is much like an isolated volcano ...
... true that Milton's outlook seems never to have been influenced by the post - Restoration and Royal Society atmosphere ; he had nothing about him of the " experimental philos- opher . " Indeed , his work is much like an isolated volcano ...
Contents
SCIENCE AND CULTURE thomas henry huxley | 3 |
LITERATURE AND SCIENCE mathew arnold | 15 |
SCIENCE POETRY AND POLITICS eric larrabee | 24 |
Copyright | |
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abstrac abstraction Aminadab ancient Annabel Lee Aristotle artist astronomy attitude Aylmer beauty believe birthmark body century circle conception creature criticism culture dark death discovery divine Donne doubt dream earth Ernest de Selincourt essay existence experience eyes fact faith feeling Frost Galileo Georgiana hand hath heart heaven human Huxley idea imagination intellectual Kepler kind knowledge language laws learning less light literary literature living man's Marjorie Hope Nicolson mathematics matter means ment metaphysical Milton mind modern moral motion Mound Builder mysterious nature Newton night Paracelsus Paradise Lost perfect philosophy physical science planets Poe's poem poet poet's poetic poetry Professor Woodlouse reality reason religion religious Robert Frost scientific scientists seems sense soul sphere spirit stars symbol T. S. Eliot Tennyson thee theory things thou thought tion true truth Tumble-Bug universe whole Woodlouse word Wordsworth