Truth in Our Practice: Representing Justice in Milton's Poetry and ProseUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 2003 - 386 pages |
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... experience. This was not ours alone to ponder; many of our colleagues who teach practicum and internship classes and students who take field experience courses shared our concern. The question, while targeting the need for a text ...
... experience. This was not ours alone to ponder; many of our colleagues who teach practicum and internship classes and students who take field experience courses shared our concern. The question, while targeting the need for a text ...
Page 220
... experience is an irreducible phenomenon, a basic, ultimate fact, which can no more be reduced to something else than can be sensory data, such as colours, sounds etc. The purpose of her study, then, is to examine these basic phenomena ...
... experience is an irreducible phenomenon, a basic, ultimate fact, which can no more be reduced to something else than can be sensory data, such as colours, sounds etc. The purpose of her study, then, is to examine these basic phenomena ...
Page 312
... experience design and economy approach architecture for design innovation entrepreneurship potential (devised by the authors based on the literature). 4.2 At present, as the economy grows, there is a boom in experience economy and ...
... experience design and economy approach architecture for design innovation entrepreneurship potential (devised by the authors based on the literature). 4.2 At present, as the economy grows, there is a boom in experience economy and ...
Contents
Constructing a Just Self in the | 72 |
Determinable Justice in The | 128 |
The English View of Ireland and the Application of Justice | 156 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actions activity Adam advance appears argument asserts audience authority basis become Book Cambridge cause century Chapter character Charles Charles's Christian citizens Civil conception conscience constitutes construct contract correct covenant critical death defense demonstrate determined discourse discussed divine effect Eikon Basilike Eikonoklastes England English example execution experience fact faith fall function Further God's justice Golden human identifies individuals injustice inner instance intelligibility interpretation Irish John king king's knowledge linguistic literary maintains means memory Milton monument nature notes observes offers Paradise Lost perform perhaps poem poetry political position practice present Press principle provides public sphere punishment readers reading reason represents requires Restoration result rhetoric role royalist Samson Agonistes Satan Second seems sense serves suggests tradition transformation trial true truth understanding Univ universal virtue writes York