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  1. Actually understand Hamlet Act 1, Scene 1. Read every line of Shakespeare’s original text alongside a modern English translation.

    • Act 1, Scene 2

      CLAUDIUS. Though yet of Hamlet our dear brother’s death The...

  2. THE MIND'S EYE What the blind see. BY OLIVER SACKS In his last letter, Goethe wrote, "The Ancients said that the animals are taught through their organs; let me add to this, so are men, but they have the advantage of teaching their organs in return." He wrote this in 1832, a time when phrenology was at its height, and the brain was

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    • Chaucer’s User of ‘An Eye in The Mind‘
    • Descartes and ‘The Mind’s Eye’
    • The Use of The Phrase ‘Mind’s Eye‘ Before Shakespeare
    • ‘The Mind’s Eye’ in Shakespeare

    The idea of the imagining something being like seeing it with an eye in the mind is an old idea, and we see one of the first references in the fourteenth century in a work by the English poet, Geoffrey Chaucer. In his great poem, The Canterbury Tales in The Man of Law’s Talehe writes:

    The idea of being able to form images in the mind is a favourite pursuit of philosophers. Descartes wrote that we have some kind of inner self in our mind that watches the thoughts that come in as though it were watching a play in the theatre.

    Chaucer’s ‘eye of the mind’ is differently worded from the idiom, however. The first time we see it in that form is in the correspondence between Sir Philip Sidney and Hubert Languet, where Languet writes “What will not these golden mountains effect … which I dare say stand before your mind’s eye day and night?”

    But, of course, as is usual when Shakespeare uses any term it becomes the most prominent and the best-known example. In his 1602 play, Hamlet, in a conversation between Hamlet and his friend, Horatio, when Hamlet is talking about his father: In this context Hamlet is using the phrase to refer to his memory, and later in the play, when talking to hi...

  3. One’s visual memory or imagination. What's the origin of the phrase 'In my mind's eye'? The concept of us having an ‘eye in our mind’ is ancient and dates back to at least the 14th century, when Chaucer used it in The Man of Law’s Tale, circa 1390: “ It were with thilke eyen of his mynde, With whiche men seen, after that they been blynde.”

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mental_imageMental image - Wikipedia

    For other uses, see Mind's eye (disambiguation). In the philosophy of mind, neuroscience, and cognitive science, a mental image is an experience that, on most occasions, significantly resembles the experience of "perceiving" some object, event, or scene but occurs when the relevant object, event, or scene is not actually present to the senses.

  5. Dec 4, 2014 · Imagine the table where you've eaten the most meals. Form a mental picture of its size, texture, and color. Easy, right? But when you summoned the table in your mind's eye, did you really...

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  7. Inside the mind’s eye. Some people have inner thoughts as vivid as cinema, and they could help us unravel the riddle of consciousness, says Daniel Cossins. “We know more about outer space than we do about our own minds” Features. primes them to perceive it again when faced with two images at once.

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