Herbert George Wells eBooks

eBooks di Herbert George Wells editi da Bookrix

Nato nel 1866 a Bromley, è autore di una sterminata produzione nei più diversi generi letterari. Tra le sue opere più note L’isola del dottor Moreau (1896) e L’uomo invisibile (1897). Morì a Londra nel 1946. Per Castelvecchi sono usciti l’edizione della Guerra dei mondi illustrata da Alvim Corrêa (2016) e Kipps. Storia di un’anima semplice (2017). Dell’autore, Elliot ha pubblicato il romanzo Gli amici appassionati (2018). I tre scritti che compongono Per una enciclopedia mondiale furono pubblicati originariamente su riviste o pensati in occasione di conferenze, e poi confluirono nella raccolta World Brain (1938).
EBOOK   9783736807761

The Time Machine. E-book. Formato EPUB Herbert George Wells   -  Bookrix, 2014  - 

The Time Traveller (for so it will be convenient to speak of him) was expounding a recondite matter to us. His grey eyes shone and twinkled, and his usually pale face was flushed and animated. The fire burned brightly, and the soft radiance of the incandescent lights in the lilies of silver caught the bubbles that flashed and passed in our glasses. Our chairs, being his patents, embraced and caressed us rather than submitted to be sat upon, and there was that luxurious after-dinner atmosphere when thought roams gracefully free of the trammels of precision. And he put it to us in this way—marking the points with a lean forefinger—as we sat and lazily admired his earnestness over this new paradox (as we thought it) and his fecundity.

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EBOOK   9783730990520

The Discovery of the Future. E-book. Formato EPUB Herbert George Wells   -  Bookrix, 2014  - 

IT will lead into my subject most conveniently to contrast and separate two divergent types of mind, types which are to be distinguished chiefly by their attitude toward time, and more particularly by the relative importance they attach and the relative amount of thought they give to the future. The first of these two types of mind, and it is, I think, the predominant type, the type of the majority of living people, is that which seems scarcely to think of the future at all, which regards it as a sort of blank non-existence upon which the advancing[6] present will presently write events. The second type, which is, I think, a more modern and much less abundant type of mind, thinks constantly and by preference of things to come, and of present things mainly in relation to the results that must arise from them. The former type of mind, when one gets it in its purity, is retrospective in habit, and it interprets the things of the present, and gives value to this and denies it to that, entirely with relation to the past. The latter type of mind is constructive in habit, it interprets the things of the present and gives value to this or that, entirely in relation to things designed or foreseen.

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