Nineteenth Century Questions
                        
                     
                                                         
                
                    Nineteenth Century Questions
                                            
                            By James Freeman Clarke
                            
                                29 Sep, 2019                            
                            
                         
                                        
                                                                        Excerpt......The German philosophy has made a distinction between the Subjective and the Objective, which has been found so convenient that it has been already naturalized and is almost acclimated in our literature.
The distinction is this: in all t
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                                                Excerpt......The German philosophy has made a distinction between the Subjective and the Objective, which has been found so convenient that it has been already naturalized and is almost acclimated in our literature.
The distinction is this: in all thought there are two factors, the thinker himself, and that about which he thinks. All thought, say our friends the Germans, results from these two factors: the subject, or the man thinking; and the object, what the man thinks about. All that part of thought which comes from the man himself, the Ego, they call subjective; all that part which comes from the outside world, the non-Ego, they call objective.
I am about to apply this distinction to literature and art; but instead of the terms Subjective and Objective, I shall use the words Lyric and Dramatic. Less