The thinker makes a great mistake when he asks after cause and effect. They both together make up the indivisible phenomenon.


The Maxims and Reflections of Goethe (ed. 1906)


The thinker makes a great mistake when he asks after cause and effect. They both together make up the indivisible phenomenon.

The thinker makes a great mistake when he asks after cause and effect. They both together make up the indivisible phenomenon.

The thinker makes a great mistake when he asks after cause and effect. They both together make up the indivisible phenomenon.

The thinker makes a great mistake when he asks after cause and effect. They both together make up the indivisible phenomenon.