img Complete Works of Plutarch - Volume 3: Essays and Miscellanies  /  Chapter 4 WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN IMAGINATION [GREEK OMITTED], THE IMAGINABLE [GREEK OMITTED], FANCY [GREEK OMITTED], AND PHANTOM [GREEK | 80.00%
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Chapter 4 WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN IMAGINATION [GREEK OMITTED], THE IMAGINABLE [GREEK OMITTED], FANCY [GREEK OMITTED], AND PHANTOM [GREEK

Word Count: 304    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

TTE

tion is denominated from [Greek omitted] which denotes light; for as light discovers itself and all other things which it illuminates, so this imagination discovers itself and that which is the cause of it. The imaginable is the efficient cause of imagination; as anything that is white, or anything that is cold, or everything that may make an impression upon the imagination. Fancy is a vain impulse upon the mind of man, proceeding from nothing which

maids with hor

not, I pray,

ith blood, and cr

t with deadly

see nothing, and yet imagine they se

an, securely

eest, thy fanc

s, "Orest

manner Theocl

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