| William Enfield, Johann Jakob Brucker - 1791 - 610 страници
...his Republic c, in which he compares the flate of the human mind with refpect to the material and the intellectual world, to that of a man, who, in a cave into which no light can enter but by a fingle paffage, views, upon a wall oppofite to the entrance, the fhadows of external objects, and miilakes... | |
| John Aikin - 1813 - 720 страници
...material world. His conceptions on this subject are beautifully expressed in a passage of his republic, in which he compares the state of the human mind with respect to the material and the intellectual world, to that of a man who, in a cave into which no light can enter but by a single... | |
| Johann Jakob Brucker, William Enfield - 1819 - 540 страници
...material world. His conceptions on this subject are beautifully expressed in a passage of his Republic,91 in which he compares the state of the human mind with respect to the material and the intellectual world, to that of a man, who, in a cave into which no light can enter but by a single... | |
| Frederick Beasley - 1822 - 584 страници
...Plato's conceptions on this subject, are beautifully expressed," says he, " in a passage of his Republic, in which he compares the state of the human mind,...the material and intellectual world, to that of a roan, who in a cave, into which no light can enter but by a single passage, views upon a wall opposite... | |
| John Edward Taylor - 1840 - 182 страници
...material world. His conceptions on this subject are beautifully expressed in a passage of his Republic, in which he compares the state of the human mind, with respect to the material and the intellectual world, to that of a man who, in a cave into which no light can enter but by a single... | |
| sir William Cathcart Boyd - 1843 - 444 страници
...expressed in a passage of his Republic, in which he compares the state of the human mind, with regard to the material and intellectual world, to that of...external objects, and mistakes them for realities. So deeply was the imagination of Plato impressed with this conception, in the *rl«-ti.xj ...$' magisraie*... | |
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