Stephen R. Lawhead (1950) American writer
Source: The Bone House (2011), p. 56
Source: Of Mice and Men (1937), Ch. 2, p. 36
Stephen R. Lawhead (1950) American writer
Source: The Bone House (2011), p. 56
John Carroll (1944) Australian professor and author
Source: Break-Out from the Crystal Palace (1974), p. 105
Mark Akenside book The Pleasures of the Imagination
Book II, lines 100–103
The Pleasures of the Imagination (1744)
Charles Williams book Descent into Hell
Descent into Hell (1937), Ch. 5, "Return to Eden"
Cesare Pavese (1908–1950) Italian poet, novelist, literary critic, and translator
Source: The devil in the hills (1949), Chapter 9, p. 319
Rose Wilder Lane (1886–1968) American journalist
Discovery of Freedom: Man's Struggle Against Authority (1943)
P. F. Strawson (1919–2006) British philosopher
Source: Individuals (1959), pp. xiv-xv.
Context: Metaphysics has a long and distinguished history, and it is consequently unlikely that there are any new truths to be discovered in descriptive metaphysics. But this does not mean that the task of descriptive metaphysics has been, or can be, done once for all. It has constantly to be done over again. If there are no new truths to be discovered, there are old truths to be rediscovered. For though the central subject-matter of descriptive metaphysics does not change, the critical and analytical idiom of philosophy changes constantly. Permanent relationships are described in an impermanent idiom, which reflects both the age’s climate of thought and the individual philosopher’s personal style of thinking. No philosopher understands his predecessors until he has re-thought their thought in his own contemporary terms; and it is characteristic of the very greatest philosophers, like Kant and Aristotle, that they, more than any others, repay this effort of re-thinking
Mathew Roydon (1583–1622) English poet
An Elegie; or Friend's Passion for his Astrophill, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
Edgar Rice Burroughs book Tarzan of the Apes
Source: Tarzan of the Apes (1912), Ch. 13 : His Own Kind