Common Courtesy in Eighteenth-century English LiteratureIn one of his Idlers, Johnson indicated the problems involved in such an achievement as follows: "As a question becomes more complicated and involved, and extends to a greater number of relations, disagreement of opinion will always be multiplied: not because we are irrational, but because we are finite beings, furnished with different kinds of knowledge, exerting different degrees of attention, one discovering consequences which escape another, none taking in the whole concatenation of causes and effects, and most comprehending but a very small part, each comparing what he observes with a different criterion and each referring it to a different purpose. "Where, then, is the wonder, that they who see only a small part should judge erroneously of the whole? |
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Page 112
... Rambler discovered , no collaterals . The Rambler thus projects no intimate circle , no impression of pointed , immediate responsiveness , such as we have found in Pope's late essays and throughout Tristram Shandy.2 The letters imputed ...
... Rambler discovered , no collaterals . The Rambler thus projects no intimate circle , no impression of pointed , immediate responsiveness , such as we have found in Pope's late essays and throughout Tristram Shandy.2 The letters imputed ...
Page 115
... Rambler does not , however , quite argue with this critic : the quotation he has given , he asserts merely ... Rambler papers : Mr. Rambler simply knows best . " It is scarcely to be doubted , that on many occasions we make the music ...
... Rambler does not , however , quite argue with this critic : the quotation he has given , he asserts merely ... Rambler papers : Mr. Rambler simply knows best . " It is scarcely to be doubted , that on many occasions we make the music ...
Page 122
... Rambler explicitly verifies first the more general statement and then the more particular one . Such a universal and thus universally binding sense of things he also acknowledges in this state- ment : " That few things are so liberally ...
... Rambler explicitly verifies first the more general statement and then the more particular one . Such a universal and thus universally binding sense of things he also acknowledges in this state- ment : " That few things are so liberally ...
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acknowledges actually agreement allows apparent argument asserts attention Author believe Berkeley Boswell common sense concern Consider continually conversation course courteous courtesy critics described discourse discussion doubt effect enforces epistle Essay established evident example existence experience explains expression figures finally further give hope human Hylas ideas imagine immediately indicated individual instance intellectual Johnson judgment kind knowledge learned least letter literary Lord matter meaning mind nature never notice objects observed occasion once opinion particular passage passive philosophers poem poet polite Pope Pope's position possible practice present Press question quotes Rambler readers reason recognizes reference remarkable represented respondent seems Shandy share social society sometimes Sterne style suggests things thought throughout tion Toby's topics train Treatise Tristram truth turn uncle understanding universal writing