Eliot's concept of time and history in wasteland
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concept of time and history in the wasteland
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T. S. Eliot's worry with the theory of time is proven by his earliest poetry. It is a piece of the improvement of his entire reasoning of life: his engagement with reality, his idea of cognizance, the capacity of history and myth in his life, and his idea of "something past", a concordance for which he is endeavoring.
Eliot's idea of time incorporates two streams which exist all the while, and which cross at critical moments. These are time transient, in which man should carry on with his life in the changing sensational world, and the Timeless, noumenal world which he experiences in this critical moments.
He may live in remarkable time in both of two ways, without expectation or reason, so he is "time-ridden", or he can live in time teleologically, making progress toward the comprehension of the plan into which he should fit keeping in mind the end goal to accomplish the amicability of the still point at the convergence of time and the Timeless.
Eliot's idea of time incorporates two streams which exist all the while, and which cross at critical moments. These are time transient, in which man should carry on with his life in the changing sensational world, and the Timeless, noumenal world which he experiences in this critical moments.
He may live in remarkable time in both of two ways, without expectation or reason, so he is "time-ridden", or he can live in time teleologically, making progress toward the comprehension of the plan into which he should fit keeping in mind the end goal to accomplish the amicability of the still point at the convergence of time and the Timeless.
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