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The Columbia World of Quotations.  1996.
 
 
NUMBER:7842
QUOTATION:Coleridge observes that all men are born Aristotelians or Platonists. The latter feel that classes, orders, and genres are realities; the former, that they are generalizations. For the latter, language is nothing but an approximative set of symbols; for the former, it is the map of the universe. The Platonist knows that the universe is somehow a cosmos, an order; that order, for the Aristotelian, can be an error or a fiction of our partial knowledge. Across the latitudes and the epochs, the two immortal antagonists change their name and language: one is Parmenides, Plato, Spinoza, Kant, Francis Bradley; the other, Heraclitus, Aristotle, Locke, Hume, William James.
ATTRIBUTION:Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986), Argentinian author. “The Nightingale of Keats,” Other Inquisitions, University of Texas Press (1964).
BIOGRAPHY:Columbia Encyclopedia.
 
 
The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press.

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