Shakespeare and Stoic Ethics, Volume 1University of Wisconsin, 1965 - 886 pages |
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Page 219
Joseph S. M. J. Chang. VI SHAKESPEARE AND THE ETHICS OF APPEARANCE AND REALITY That Shakespeare's dramas are profoundly concerned with the disparity between appearances and reality would hardly be disputed by those who have experienced ...
Joseph S. M. J. Chang. VI SHAKESPEARE AND THE ETHICS OF APPEARANCE AND REALITY That Shakespeare's dramas are profoundly concerned with the disparity between appearances and reality would hardly be disputed by those who have experienced ...
Page 222
... appearance and reality , just as we tend to think in terms of the subconscious . I will not be propos- ing Stoicism as a source for Shakespearian appearance and reality , so much as using it as a guide for understanding one aspect of ...
... appearance and reality , just as we tend to think in terms of the subconscious . I will not be propos- ing Stoicism as a source for Shakespearian appearance and reality , so much as using it as a guide for understanding one aspect of ...
Page 253
... appearance and reality as an epistemological problem . We can be fairly certain , however , that he did have a glimpse at this aspect of appearance and reality , for in Plutarch's Life of Brutus , Cassius speaks at length on how the ...
... appearance and reality as an epistemological problem . We can be fairly certain , however , that he did have a glimpse at this aspect of appearance and reality , for in Plutarch's Life of Brutus , Cassius speaks at length on how the ...
Contents
GREEK STOICISM | 29 |
ROMAN STOICISM | 53 |
STOICISM IN THE RENAISSANCE | 99 |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
according action appearance and reality appetites Aristotle Boethius Brutus Cardan Cassius Christian Cicero cism concerned conscience Consolation to Helvia Cornwallis Craig death Diogenes Laertius Divine Providence doctrines doth drama Elizabethan Elizabethan Tragedy Epictetus epistemology Essays evil expedient Fate fear Fortune Fortune's freedom gods Greek Guillaume du Vair Hamlet hath Heaven vpon Earth human ideas indifferent individual intro Julius Caesar Justus Lipsius king Library New York Loeb Classical Library logic Machiavel Machiavelli Marcus Aurelius means Meditations mercy mind monism Montaigne moral passions philosophy play Plutarch political positive Praz precepts Prince principle problem prudenzia question rational reason reference Renaissance Roman Stoicism Roman Stoics Rudolf Kirk Seneca sense Shakespeare Shakespearian soul stage Stoi Stoic ethics Stoic influence Stoic thought Stoicism Stoicism of Seneca T. S. Eliot teleological things thou tion tradition Tranquillity trans translation true truth understanding universe Vair vertue virtĂș virtue Zeno