| William James - 1898 - 88 páginas
...they realize themselves with the acutest internality, with the most violent thrills of life. 'T is you who are dead, stone-dead and blind and senseless,...of him, as Stevenson says, is to miss the whole of him. 10 Not a being of the countless throng is there whose continued life is not called for, and called... | |
| George Holmes Howison - 1901 - 446 páginas
...and insight. . . . Every one of these aliens, however grotesque or even repulsive to you or to me, is animated by an inner joy of living as hot or hotter than that which we feel beating in our private breasts. . . . Not a being of the countless throng is there whose continued... | |
| Frank Ballard - 1906 - 632 páginas
...That would indeed be letting blindness lay down the law to sight.' 1 In so far as it is true that' each of these grotesque or even repulsive aliens is...that which you feel beating in your private breast,' there is nothing repulsive to the Christian mind in the thought of their continued life. The universe,... | |
| James Henry Tuckwell - 1915 - 372 páginas
...thrills of life, Tis you who are dead, stone-dead, and blind, and senseless, in your way of looking. You open your eyes upon a scene of which you miss...or hotter than that which you feel beating in your own private breast. The sun rises and beauty beams to light his path. To miss the inner joy of him,... | |
| John Herman Randall - 1916 - 376 páginas
...James, " 'Tis you who are dead, stone-dead and blind and senseless in your way of looking at them. You open your eyes upon a scene of which you miss...or hotter than that which you feel beating in your own breast. To miss the inner joy of him is to miss the whole of him." And we may add: to fail to discern... | |
| William James - 1956 - 452 páginas
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