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  • Format: ePub

Excerpt: If somebody showed us a document which he said was an unpublished letter of Dr. Johnson?s, and on reading it through we came across the word ?telephone?, we should be fairly justified in sending him about his business. The fact that there was no such thing as a telephone until many years after Johnson?s death would leave no doubt whatever in our minds that the letter was not written by him. If we cared to go farther, we could say with equal certainty that the letter was written since the beginning of the nineteenth century, when the telephone was invented. Now suppose that there had…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
Excerpt: If somebody showed us a document which he said was an unpublished letter of Dr. Johnson?s, and on reading it through we came across the word ?telephone?, we should be fairly justified in sending him about his business. The fact that there was no such thing as a telephone until many years after Johnson?s death would leave no doubt whatever in our minds that the letter was not written by him. If we cared to go farther, we could say with equal certainty that the letter was written since the beginning of the nineteenth century, when the telephone was invented. Now suppose that there had been nothing about telephones in the letter, but that it had contained an account of a thunder-storm. If in describing the stillness just before the storm broke the writer had said that ?the atmosphere was electric?, we could still be fairly positive that he was not Dr. Johnson. But this time it would not be because the thing of which the letter spoke had no existence in Johnson?s day. No doubt the heavens during a storm a hundred and fifty years ago were exactly as highly charged with electricity as they are to-day; but if we look up the word electric in the Oxford Dictionary, we find that in Johnson?s time it simply was not used in that way. Thus, in his own dictionary it is defined as:A property in some bodies, whereby when rubbed so as to grow warm, they draw little bits of paper, or such-like substances, to them.

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Autorenporträt
Owen Barfield (1898-1997), the British philosopher and critic, has been called the "First and Last Inkling," because of his influence and enduring role in the group known as the Oxford Inklings. The Inklings included C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Charles Williams. It was Barfield who first advanced the ideas about language, myth, and belief that became identified with the thinking and art of the Inklings. He is the author of numerous books, including Poetic Diction: A Study in Meaning; Romanticism Comes of Age; Unancestoral Voice; History in English Words; and Worlds Apart: A Dialogue of the 1960s. His history of the evolution of human consciousness, Saving the Appearances: A Study in Idolatry, achieved a place in the list of the "100 Best Spiritual Books of the Century."