| 1844 - 648 pages
...been taucht to ask themselves of any established opinion, li it true ? and by Coleridge, What it thi meaning of it / The one took his stand outside the...stranger to it ; the other looked at it from within, and endeavored to see it with the eyes of a believer in it, to discover by what apparent facts it was at... | |
| 1844 - 638 pages
...ask themselves of any established opinion, Jt it true? and by Coleridge, What is the meaning of Ц 1 The one took his stand outside the received opinion, and surveyed it as an entire stranger toit; the other looked at it from within, and endeavored to see it with the eyes of a believer in it,... | |
| 1846 - 302 pages
...truly as Uentham, "the great questioner of things established:" * » * * By Bentham, beyond all others, men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to...And by Coleridge, what is the meaning of it? The one look his stand outside the received opinion, and surveyed it as an entire stranger toit : the other,... | |
| John Stuart Mill - 1864 - 174 pages
...established ; " for a questioner needs not necessarily be an enemy. By Bentham, beyond all others, men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to...stranger to it : the other looked at it from within, and endeavored to see it with the eyes of a believer in it ; to discover by what apparent facts it was... | |
| 1864 - 974 pages
...over the ocean of mind, have only just begun to meet and intersect." "By Bentham, beyond all others, men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to...true? and by Coleridge, What is the meaning of it?" "It would be difficult to find two persons of philosophic eminence more exactly the contrary of one... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1893 - 190 pages
...more a benefit to society, rather than a nuisance and an anachronism ? " By Coleridge," says JS Mill, "men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to any ancient or received opinion, not ' Is it true,' but ' What is the meaning of it ? "... He looked at it from within and endeav| ored... | |
| Laura Johnson Wylie - 1894 - 242 pages
...the less essential to any high development. " By Bentham beyond all others," says John Stuart Mill, " men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to...to it ; the other /' looked at it from within, and endeavored to see it i with the eyes of a believer in it." J It is this . \ i power of looking at things... | |
| James Seth - 1912 - 404 pages
...things established " ; for a questioner need not necessarily be an enemy. By Bentham, beyond all others, men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to...true ? and by Coleridge, What is the meaning of it ? ' 1 Yet in Mill's eyes Coleridge is pre-eminently the representative of a wise conservatism in the... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1919 - 504 pages
...Dissertations atid Discussions. been taught to ask themselves (with regard to any doctrine or institution), Is it true? and by Coleridge, What is the meaning...surveyed it as an entire stranger to it. The other endeavoured to see it with the eyes of a believer in it.' Accordingly, Coleridge's method is to look... | |
| J. P. T. Bury - 1960 - 810 pages
...attributed its causes rather arbitrarily to two men, when in 1867 he wrote: 'By Bentham, beyond all others, men have been led to ask themselves in regard to any...received opinion, Is it true? and by Coleridge, What is 1 Walter Bagehot, Literary Studies, vol. n (London, 1858), p. 160. 157 the meaning of it?'1 And the... | |
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