Robert B. Heilman and Eric Voegelin: A Friendship in Letters, 1944-1984University of Missouri Press, 2004 - 332 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 66
Seite xi
... never understood was caused in part by his epistolary instincts. For Robert, the epistolary give-and-take was like a good conversation, but even better in that many such pleasurable conversations could be happening simultaneously with ...
... never understood was caused in part by his epistolary instincts. For Robert, the epistolary give-and-take was like a good conversation, but even better in that many such pleasurable conversations could be happening simultaneously with ...
Seite xv
... never took me as seriously as I wanted to be taken, thank you for the years of conversation and argument. I also acknowledge with gratitude the friendship of Mary Elaine and Bob House, who, in remaining committed to the life of the mind ...
... never took me as seriously as I wanted to be taken, thank you for the years of conversation and argument. I also acknowledge with gratitude the friendship of Mary Elaine and Bob House, who, in remaining committed to the life of the mind ...
Seite 2
... never articulated directly in the correspondence (or elsewhere as far as I am aware), the relationship between Heilman and Voegelin was rooted to a large extent in Aristotle's homonoia, or like-mindedness. And while over time the ...
... never articulated directly in the correspondence (or elsewhere as far as I am aware), the relationship between Heilman and Voegelin was rooted to a large extent in Aristotle's homonoia, or like-mindedness. And while over time the ...
Seite 13
... never any diminution of their wonderful cordiality. An Exemplary Year in the Correspondence While in the late correspondence there is very little discussion of ideas, from the late 1940s into the early 1960s there were seven ...
... never any diminution of their wonderful cordiality. An Exemplary Year in the Correspondence While in the late correspondence there is very little discussion of ideas, from the late 1940s into the early 1960s there were seven ...
Seite 16
... never knows what hit him.” Voegelin pondered whether the term tragedy applied under such circumstances and then raised the more general problem of a particular culture's spiritual substance and the necessity of creating an appropriate ...
... never knows what hit him.” Voegelin pondered whether the term tragedy applied under such circumstances and then raised the more general problem of a particular culture's spiritual substance and the necessity of creating an appropriate ...
Inhalt
25 | |
With a Humble Request | 107 |
Philia Politike | 146 |
Hurried over the Face of the Earth | 202 |
Not a Postscript at All but a New Essay | 250 |
What Was Formed at That Time Holds Together | 267 |
Appendix | 293 |
Appendix | 299 |
Appendix C | 305 |
Index | 325 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American Anamnesis appears Baton Rouge become comes consider copy correspondence course criticism Dear Eric delighted Don Stanford English Eric Voegelin especially essay existence experience expression fact feel find first foundations give governess hand Heilman History hope human idea Institute intellectual interesting Italy July kind later least lecture letter Lissy literary literature look March matter meaning mention mind move Munich nature never offer perhaps philosophy political possible present Press probably problem professor published question reality reason received remarks Review Robert Ruth Seattle seems sense Sincerely social sort summer sure symbols talk tell term thanks thing thought tion tragedy trying Turn understand University volume week whole wishes wonderful write wrote