The Self Imagined: Three Dutch Photographers : Teun Hocks, Lydia Schouten, Henk Tas
The medieval/Renaissance Platonist Nicholas of Cusa (1401–1464) developed explicitly the idea of creative participation in the Divine mind. Through his doctrine of the docta ignorantia, Nicholas attacks both the essentialism of ...
According to Robison, we have no idea of the self whatsoever, imagined or otherwise. Rather, the self is merely a “bundle” of perceptions, and when we observe our “selves” all we are really doing is apprehending one of these many ...
In doing so , you change the self - image with which you rise and fall . ... It is imagination which gives us the goal for which we head . We act or fail to act ; our acts are accelerated or frozen because of imagination .
Imagining Australia : The Architecture of the National Museum of Australia Asks ' What Community ? CHRISTINE DAUBER The National Museum of Australia opened its doors to the Australian public on 11 March 2001. It is Australia's first ...
the world and of other people renders the imagination a particularly flexible and versatile factor in generating our notions ... As I indicated earlier, the self-proclaiming imagination is more typically found in the realm of the arts, ...
I will not give an exhaustive overview of the prevalence of this type of social imagination in contemporary social theory ... That does not mean that we should start believing in the existence of the self that the imagination claims.
Changing and perfecting the self is both individualistic and socially responsible and the upwardly mobile self is perceived as hopefully moving their family and community up with them. The self-made self, who holds the power to make ...
I have found a similar state of affairs in the criticism of Shakespeare (Paris 1991a) and Jane Austen (Paris 1978b). Those who offer the orthodox Christian reading of Shakespeare are responding to the side of him that believes that ...
... organized on the collective universality of the dictates of Reason, which the imagination translates. The particular form of the “Self” or “self-consciousness” that Coleridge will go on to elaborate in the Biographia in turn becomes ...