अंग्रेज़ी किताबें जो «HYPONOIA» से संबंधित हैं
निम्नलिखित ग्रंथसूची चयनों में
hyponoia का उपयोग पता करें।
hyponoia aसे संबंधित किताबें और अंग्रेज़ी साहित्य में उसके उपयोग का संदर्भ प्रदान करने वाले उनके संक्षिप्त सार।.
Subtitle: Or, Thoughts on a Spiritual Understanding of the Apocalypse, or Book of Revelation.
2
Dictionary of Premillennial Theology
"Allegorical interpretation believes that beneath the letter (rhete) or the obvious (
phanera) is the real meaning (hyponoia) of the passage. Allegory is defined by
some as an extended metaphor. There is a literary allegory which is intentionally
...
3
Polis and Personification in Classical Athenian Art
Ancient authors used hyponoia to refer to hidden or allusive meanings, as in
Platon's dismissal of immoral myths regarding the gods, “whether they are
composed with or without underlying meanings” (οὔτ' ἐν ὑπονοίαις πεποιημένας
οὔτε ...
4
Forgotten Paths: Etymology and the Allegorical Mindset
17 second, the greek use of alle ̄goria as a substitute for the word hyponoia, or
underlying sense, in the exegetical practice that gains currency by the first
century ad and is recorded by Plutarch, may well be due to the rising influence of
...
5
Reading Plotinus: A Practical Introduction to Neoplatonism
It is true that Plato does not approve of hyponoia, or allegory, in certain
circumstances, but he actually invites hyponoia in the case of his own myths.
Indeed. Plotinus just gets carried away for a moment with a favourite image and
even thinks of ...
Dianoia and Hyponoia in Isocrates and Plato ONE OF OUR earliest interpreters
and theorists of interpretation — and one who conveniently introduces the long-
standing association between rhetoric and hermeneutics — is the fictitious ...
Brenda Deen Schildgen, 1997
7
A Companion to Greek Art
Hyponoia similarly refers to hidden or allusive meanings, but was used for
artworks, at least in ekphraseis or extended descriptions, such as the decorations
on Kapaneus's shield, in Euripides's Phoenician Women: The iron decorations
on his ...
Tyler Jo Smith, Dimitris Plantzos, 2012
8
The Blackwell Guide to Plato's Republic
Socrates gives this reason for banishing these objectionable stories: “The young
cannot distinguish what is an allegory (hyponoia) from what is not, and the
opinions they form at that age tend to be ineradicable and unchangeable” (II.
378d–e).
9
At the Limits of Art: A Literary Study of Aelius Aristides' ...
Instead he refers to a “notion,” or “general impression” (ennoia), of bathing, and
some sense of being defiled (molunthénai)—the vagueness of which causes him
to hesitate over the dream's “second-order meaning” (hyponoia).43 Aristides' ...
10
Interpreting the Images of Greek Myths: An Introduction
... as mythographer (hyponoia, mythopoioi) hyponoia: Plato, Republic 378d;
mythopoioi: Plato, Republic 377c J. Pépin, Mythe et allégorie (Paris 1958) 85–7 (
on hyponoia) K. Morgan, Myth and Philosophy from the Presocratics to Plato
Guide ...