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Page 34
... Homer . The plurality of Hesiodic daimones contrasts the characteristically singular Homeric daimōn . Literary histories often begin with Homer , yet Hesiod's writings most likely represent earlier religious beliefs . Thus the plural ...
... Homer . The plurality of Hesiodic daimones contrasts the characteristically singular Homeric daimōn . Literary histories often begin with Homer , yet Hesiod's writings most likely represent earlier religious beliefs . Thus the plural ...
Page 36
... Homer's name for a divine reality ; rather , daimōn charac- terizes the vocabulary of men , who speak with limited comprehension of providence . Any occurrence that " comes to us like a sending from above " may be associated with daimōn ...
... Homer's name for a divine reality ; rather , daimōn charac- terizes the vocabulary of men , who speak with limited comprehension of providence . Any occurrence that " comes to us like a sending from above " may be associated with daimōn ...
Page 37
... Homer's " right and duty as a poet to supply definite information on those points that were left vague and indefinite in the popular con- ception of the gods " ( ibid . ) . But Ehnmark does not explain the different uses of daimon and ...
... Homer's " right and duty as a poet to supply definite information on those points that were left vague and indefinite in the popular con- ception of the gods " ( ibid . ) . But Ehnmark does not explain the different uses of daimon and ...
Contents
Preface 743 | 11 |
PART ONE Philosophy of Genius | 25 |
PART TWO Literature of Monologue | 109 |
Copyright | |
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Abraham Adam Addison angel appears Arthur Schnitzler autoaffection autoeroticism becomes Book of Jubilees character Coleridge Coleridge's conversation Conj conventions conversation poems daimones daimonion Dasein Derrida deviate dialogue discourse divine Logos drama dream Duff Edouard Dujardin Eolian essence evil expression Faustus fiction figure first-person Genius and Monologue God's gods Greek Gustl Hamlet Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's henceforth cited Hesiodic Homer human Husserl ibid illusion imaginative immanence individual internal monologue internal speech interpretation introjected Kant Kubla Khan language linguistic literary logoi Macbeth madness meaning Meletus mode Molly narrative narrator ontological original genius Pamela perverse phenomenology Philo philosophy Plato Plato's Poe's poetic poetry present pretense psychological refers represent representation rhetorical Richard satan scene Schnitzler Sein und Zeit Shakespeare Socrates soliloquy solitary speech speak speaker stream of consciousness textual theological theos thou thought tradition trans transcendence transcendental trope turns University Press voice words writing YHWH Young Zeit