The Shadow WithinHoughton Mifflin, 1973 - 476 páginas To think and write intelligently, one must become aware of the larger issues and problems that concern modern man. In order to provide a developing writer with a perspective that is broad, social, cultural, and historical, editors Cherry, Conley and Hirsch have compiled a wide variety of literary selections that include: essays (descriptive, narrative, argument and persuasion, exposition, definition, comparison and contrast, cause and effect, problem-solution, example and illustration, classification and division); short stories; and poems. Arranged thematically, selections explore the nature of man, his relationships to his natural and cultural environments, and his continuous search for a viable identity. Part one considers man's need to perceive himself as being of special significance in relation to the universe and the natural world. Part two deals with man's search for a viable identity through culture and civilization. Part three explores the role of modern technology in contemporary culture and the nature of the responsibilities it imposes on man. Part four examines mans use of his own creative and imaginative potential in his search for valid definitions of himself and of reality. Part five is concerned with man's need and capacity to achieve a new and viable harmony with a rapidly changing world--From publisher description. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 86
Página 354
... mean that he is responsible for his own individuality , but that he is responsible for all men . The word subjectivism has two meanings , and our opponents play on the two . Subjectivism means , on the one hand , that an individual ...
... mean that he is responsible for his own individuality , but that he is responsible for all men . The word subjectivism has two meanings , and our opponents play on the two . Subjectivism means , on the one hand , that an individual ...
Página 357
... means , but as an end . " Very well , if I stay with my mother , I'll treat her as an end and not as a means ; but by virtue of this very fact , I'm running the risk of treating the people around me who are fighting , as means ; and ...
... means , but as an end . " Very well , if I stay with my mother , I'll treat her as an end and not as a means ; but by virtue of this very fact , I'm running the risk of treating the people around me who are fighting , as means ; and ...
Página 366
... means nothing else but this : life has no meaning a priori . Before you come alive , life is nothing ; it's up to you to give it a meaning , and value is nothing else but the meaning that you choose . In that way , you see , there is a ...
... means nothing else but this : life has no meaning a priori . Before you come alive , life is nothing ; it's up to you to give it a meaning , and value is nothing else but the meaning that you choose . In that way , you see , there is a ...
Contenido
Genesis | 5 |
Was the World Made for Man? | 22 |
Field and Forest Randall Jarrell | 25 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 43 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
adaptability American animals bagasse become believe biological called century Chief Seattle Christian civilization course cultural evolution culture dance Dangs dark Daru Diana Dovisch e. e. cummings earth effect environment evolution exist experience eyes face fact father feel feet Garfield hand head high prophet human ideas Indian individual Irish setter James Baldwin kind knew knowledge Koryak land living look Machine magic man's mankind Mary Fortune means ment mind modern mother nature never night Ohio once organism person Pitts pollution polygamy primitive problem produced puberty Pyramid Lake question religion Ruth Benedict scientific scientists seems shaman Sivapithecus social society stone tell things thought tion traits trees tribe turn understand variety Vashti village voice vomitories Yurok