"Knowing the theory of anything is contrasted with know-how in all the arts...Beethoven..Michelangelo..Shakespeare, all great exponents of know-how, probably knew how to manipulate their instruments to achieve the desired results long before they knew the theory of their art. Perhaps some of them never bothered to learn the theory. On the other hand, there are many who know the theory better than these, but who lack know-how....Although we acquire the skill of understanding words by experience, so that we know the correlations between them and things, between words and other words, and between words and feelings and actions, we do not do it by inductive reasoning. Nor must we think that we do it by deductive reasoning... In the main, words are cues rather than clues."
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Poets from EnglandPlaywrights from EnglandActors from EnglandPoets from the United KingdomShakespeare
Original Language: English
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Sources
Colin Murray Turbayne, The Myth of Metaphor (1962) pp. 90-91.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare
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Categories
William Shakespeare
1564 – 1616
englischer Dichter
362 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by William Shakespeare →
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