| George Henderson - 1911 - 368 pages
...obedience every man is free to impose upon himself. But man does not often reach his fundamental self: "the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds itself in space rather than in time ; we live for the external world rather than for ourselves ; we... | |
| Georges Sorel - 1914 - 322 pages
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| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 314 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 312 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 312 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| Lucius Hopkins Miller - 1916 - 312 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are rare, and that u just why we are rarely free. The greater part of the time we lire outside ourselves, hardly perceiving... | |
| 1918 - 684 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| Arthur Clinton Watson - 1918 - 112 pages
...of which the succession in duration has nothing in common with juxtaposition in homogeneous space. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| Mrs. Sheila (Jamieson) Radice, Sheila Jamieson Radice - 1920 - 192 pages
...an elaborate juggling with simulacra. "The moments at which we grasp ourselves are rare, and that is why we are rarely free. The greater part of the time...perceiving anything of ourselves but our own ghost, a colorless shadow which pure duration projects into homogeneous space. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
| John Alexander Gunn - 1920 - 230 pages
...side-by-sideness. But the moments at which we thus grasp ourselves are rare ; the greater part of our time we live outside ourselves, hardly perceiving...ourselves but our own ghost — a colourless shadow which is but the social representation of the real and largely concealed Ego. Hence our life unfolds in space... | |
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