Disowning Knowledge: In Seven Plays of ShakespeareCambridge University Press, 31/03/2003 Reissued with a new essay on Macbeth this famous collection of essays on Shakespeare's tragedies considers these plays as responses to the crisis of knowledge and the emergence of modern skepticism provoked by the new science of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. |
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... language and I imagined in any other mode). It seemed to me a remarkable stroke simply to recognize that the time had come again in which a project of that character could be well conceived, or reconceived. I said so, moved as much by ...
... language and I imagined in any other mode). It seemed to me a remarkable stroke simply to recognize that the time had come again in which a project of that character could be well conceived, or reconceived. I said so, moved as much by ...
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... language, the creature of the greatest ordering of English – unless his writing is engaging the depth of the philosophical preoccupations of his culture. I guess the insistence comes from a sense that English philosophy is characterized ...
... language, the creature of the greatest ordering of English – unless his writing is engaging the depth of the philosophical preoccupations of his culture. I guess the insistence comes from a sense that English philosophy is characterized ...
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... language game(s), apart from its ordinary criteria. It is essential to language that words can so be turned. But there are consequences. In turning the concept of belief to name our immediate or absolute relation to the world, say our ...
... language game(s), apart from its ordinary criteria. It is essential to language that words can so be turned. But there are consequences. In turning the concept of belief to name our immediate or absolute relation to the world, say our ...
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... language, recurrent and essential to the stories I tell in those pages about skepticism and knowledge, about privacy and publicness, about the inner and the outer, about ordinary language philosophy and its position in a philosophical ...
... language, recurrent and essential to the stories I tell in those pages about skepticism and knowledge, about privacy and publicness, about the inner and the outer, about ordinary language philosophy and its position in a philosophical ...
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... language, with the vulgarity of the vulgar tongue, seems revelatory of something in skepticism that Descartes and Hume, for instance, were not able quite to thematize; so revelatory of philosophy, or of a major strain in philosophy ...
... language, with the vulgarity of the vulgar tongue, seems revelatory of something in skepticism that Descartes and Hume, for instance, were not able quite to thematize; so revelatory of philosophy, or of a major strain in philosophy ...
Índice
A Reading of King Lear | |
Othello and the Stake of the Other | |
Coriolanus and Interpretations of Politics | |
Hamlets Burden of Proof | |
Reading The Winters Tale | |
Macbeth Appalled | |
Index of Names and Titles | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Disowning Knowledge: In Seven Plays of Shakespeare Stanley Cavell Pré-visualização indisponível - 2003 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
accept acknowledgment action answer Antony and Cleopatra Antony’s avoid become beginning believe character Claim of Reason concept condition Cordelia Coriolanus Coriolanus’s critics death denial deny Descartes Descartes’s Desdemona difference doubt drama dumbshow Edgar Emerson epistemology essay example existence expression eyes fact fantasy father feel figure Freud’s Ghost’s Gloucester Gloucester’s Hamlet happening hence Hermione human human sexuality idea imagine interpretation intuition issue King Lear knowledge Lady Macbeth language Lear’s Leontes madness marriage matter mean metaphysical mind mother murder nature one’s opening ordinary language philosophy Othello ourselves particular perhaps philosophy play’s political Polixenes present problem Psychoanalysis question reading recognize relation response revenge Rome scapegoat scene seems sense Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy shame skepticism speak specific speech suggests suppose tell theater theatrical thing thought tragedy tragic truth understand Volumnia Winter’s Tale wish witches Wittgenstein words