Virtue's Own Feature: Shakespeare and the Virtue Ethics TraditionUniversity of Delaware Press, 1995 - 260 Seiten "Using an historical approach, Virtue's Own Feature explores nine of Shakespeare's most successful works as representations of the passions, virtues, and vices as they are complexly and extensively set out by Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas." "The work first undertakes to describe the late Elizabethan poetic of Sir Philip Sidney, which is demonstrated to be Shakespeare's poetic as well. Second, this study explores Shakespeare's plays in relation to the Aristotelian-Thomistic tradition of moral philosophy, one important branch of a major sixteenth-century philosophical tradition."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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Seite 54
... nature , ” etc. Third , since the imitation of such a universal form of nature might render a passion or virtue too abstract , there is an awareness and consideration of the importance of adaptation to concrete circumstances " to show ...
... nature , ” etc. Third , since the imitation of such a universal form of nature might render a passion or virtue too abstract , there is an awareness and consideration of the importance of adaptation to concrete circumstances " to show ...
Seite 85
... nature , tradition , and their limiting horizons and open only to a world of unlimited and undetermined possibilities . But Shake- speare's world is not that of Kant or John Stuart Mill . The determinations of nature assume great ...
... nature , tradition , and their limiting horizons and open only to a world of unlimited and undetermined possibilities . But Shake- speare's world is not that of Kant or John Stuart Mill . The determinations of nature assume great ...
Seite 134
... nature ? Present fears Are less than horrible imaginings . My thought , whose murder yet is but fantastical , Shakes so my single state of man that function Is smothered in surmise and nothing is But what is not . ( 1.3.116-42 ) The two ...
... nature ? Present fears Are less than horrible imaginings . My thought , whose murder yet is but fantastical , Shakes so my single state of man that function Is smothered in surmise and nothing is But what is not . ( 1.3.116-42 ) The two ...
Inhalt
Preface | 9 |
Acknowledgments | 15 |
Sidneys Apology and Shakespeares Poetic | 21 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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