Plato and MiltonCornell University Press, 1965 - 182 pages |
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Page viii
... questions about the poems of Milton . The apparently inconsistent treatment of knowledge in Areo- pagitica and Paradise Lost , the paradox of Adam's fall , the discrepant rejection and use of the pagan classics in Para- dise Regained ...
... questions about the poems of Milton . The apparently inconsistent treatment of knowledge in Areo- pagitica and Paradise Lost , the paradox of Adam's fall , the discrepant rejection and use of the pagan classics in Para- dise Regained ...
Page 47
... question the right of an art to exist in opposition to the end of all other human activity , the happiness that , according to him , is won only through the wisdom synonomous with virtue . What then of the poet's divine inspiration ? If ...
... question the right of an art to exist in opposition to the end of all other human activity , the happiness that , according to him , is won only through the wisdom synonomous with virtue . What then of the poet's divine inspiration ? If ...
Page 149
... question must be , What was the doctrine of love that thus enchanted Milton ? Having found that , and the use to ... questions , it is worth observing that 149 The Doctrine of Love.
... question must be , What was the doctrine of love that thus enchanted Milton ? Having found that , and the use to ... questions , it is worth observing that 149 The Doctrine of Love.
Contents
Milton as a Student of Plato | 3 |
Academics Old and New | 27 |
Himself a True Poem | 45 |
Copyright | |
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Academic Adam Agar Apology for Smectymnuus appetite Areopagitica argument Aristotle Athenaeus Athenian Augustine beauty better Cambridge Platonists censorship Christian Church-Gov Comus Critias delight desire Dialogues Diodati Diogenes Laertius Diotima divine doctrine Downham ethical evil faith fame glory happiness hath Heaven heavenly Herbert Agar highest honor human important Jesus John Milton judgment Justice knowl knowledge Laws learning Milton and Plato mind moral myth nature Neoplatonic pagan Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passim perfect Phaedo Phaedrus philosophers Plato and Milton Platonic Idea Platonists pleasure Plotinus poems poet poetic poetry praise Prolusion Protagoras Raphael reader realm Reason of Church-Government references Republic Samson Agonistes Satan Smect Smectymnuus Socrates Sophist soul Spenser spirit Symposium taught teaching thee theory things thir thou thought Tillyard Timaeus tion Tractate true truth universal virtue wealth whole wisdom wise wisest words Xenophon