This is a book which demands and deserves study. Either to translate or to appreciate it requires a somewhat peculiar turn of mind. Not that any body could read it without profit, but to gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some... On the Nature of the Scholar and Its Manifestations - Page 5by Johann Gottlieb Fichte, William Smith - 1845 - 220 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1845 - 458 pages
...this and some of the other Essays. This is scarcely a book to extract from, even if we had the space. To be appreciated it must be studied, and the study will be well repaid. The translation is good, and the whole made as intelligible to English readers as German metaphysics... | |
| Eliza Buckminster Lee - 1845 - 278 pages
...Philosophy of Art. gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for sucn studies, and some training in them too To be appreciated...of fine passages, heartily commending it to all of pur readers who desire to make acquaintance with the philosophy of art. The extracts we have taken... | |
| 1845 - 452 pages
...that anybody could read it without profit, but to gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies and some training in them too. The word aesthetic* is almost new in English literature, but is only a new designation for a class... | |
| Johann Gottlieb Fichte - 1846 - 166 pages
...continued. body could read it withont profit, but to pain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies, and...Examiner. " Here we must close, unwillingly, this volume, soaboundingin food for thought, so fruitful of line passages, heartily commending it to all of our... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1846 - 418 pages
...CATHOl.IC body could read it withont profit, but to gain from it all that it is caliable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies, and...Examiner. " Here we must close, unwillingly, this volume, soaboundingin food for thought, so fruitful of fine passages, heartily commending it to all of our... | |
| Thomas Cooper - 1846 - 96 pages
...that any ody could read it without profit, but to gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies, and...must be studied, and the study will be well repaid. " — Christain Exam iner. " Here we must close, unwillingly, this volume, soaboundinginfoodfor thought,... | |
| Hermann Ulrici - 1846 - 596 pages
...without profit, but to gain from it all that it is capable of. yielding, there must be some aptitude lor such studies, and some training in them too •......appreciated it must be studied, and the study will be well repaid."—Chrutian Examiner. gered over this book: for, albeit, philosophy is somewhat out of fashion... | |
| Carl Ullmann - 1846 - 164 pages
...there is no sphere for the operation of the will. gain from it all that it is capable of yielding. there must be some aptitude for such studies, and some training in them too To be appreciated it " The style in which the whole volume U written is particularly beautiful, there is a consciousness... | |
| Jean-Charles-Léonard Simonde Sismondi - 1847 - 494 pages
...that any body could read it without profit ; but, to gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies, and...to make acquaintance with the philosophy of art." — Critic. " This excellent oration is an application to art of Schelling's general philosophic principles.... | |
| Andrews Norton - 1847 - 414 pages
...that any body could read it without profit ; but, to gain from it all that it is capable of yielding, there must be some aptitude for such studies, and...to make acquaintance with the philosophy of art." — Critic. principles. Schelling takes the bold course, and declares that what is ordinarily called... | |
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