In Augustine's view, we live in what he calls the region of unlikeness, and what we're unlike is God. |
Friendship requires that rare mean betwixt likeness and unlikeness that piques each with the presence of power and of consent in the other party. |
As Socrates emphasizes, it is possible for sensible things to partake of both likeness and unlikeness, and hence be both like and unlike. |
You mean being and not being, and likeness and unlikeness, and same and different, and one and any other number they have. |
This is a good measure of Gould's achievement — that he made an unlikeness seem a likeness. |
Despite many unlikenesses, the nineteenth century was strangely reminiscent of the Periclean age. |