|  | books.google.com Besides, it is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. The argument that there is no room for poets in any human society which is an end in itself remains ... |
|
 | books.google.com Eliot, T. S. Culture is one thing and varnish is another. - Emerson, Ralph Waldo It is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. - Frye, Northrop Culture of the ... |
|
 | books.google.com As imaginative activity, it is the "direct expression of psychic life. ... unconscious and archetypes, but on the other, it is the essence of imaginative culture, which " transcends the limits of both the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. |
|
 | books.google.com Immanuel Kant, Allen Wood, George Di Giovanni - 1998 - 229 pages | A new translation of Kant's great essay on religion and its relation to reason. |
|
 | books.google.com |
 | books.google.com James L. Calderwood, Harold E. Toliver - 1968 - 411 pages Besides, it is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. The argument that there is no room for poets in any human society which is an end in itself remains ... |
|
 | books.google.com Thus culture's essential service to a religion is to destroy intellectual idolatry, the recurrent tendency in religion to ... is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. |
|
 | books.google.com Northrop Frye, Robert Dayton Denham - 2006 - 450 pages Culture interposes, between the ordinary and the religious life, a total vision of possibilities ... clercs.67 Besides, it is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. |
|
 | books.google.com A. E. Dyson - 1986 - 217 pages Culture interposes, between the ordinary and the religious life, a total vision of possibilities, and insists on its totality - for ... essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable. |
|
 | books.google.com He further observes , Besides, it is of the essence of imaginative culture that it transcends the limits both of the naturally possible and of the morally acceptable . . . .83 When we look at Yeats's poetry from this point of view, it would seem that by ... |
|
| |