The pen is stronger than the king of the 17th century, the Caesar of the UK sitting on the head of the king and the throne is visible, and all new classes appear there. England in the 17th century was full of change and there were still many work that the industrial revolution had to do before completely dominating the country. The monarchy has dominated the political situation for centuries, and this has fundamentally changed. They still dominate the monarchs for the majority of this period, but their power is limited to lower them to embarrassed status.
John Dunn is often referred to as the protagonist of British writers' school of the 17th century and is known as a metaphysical poet. This poem is misleading, as the poet does not think that he belongs to any school and does not write or write to each other. Their style, that is, they use wit rather than any thematic ideology. Louis-Marz scholar explains wit "wisdom, reason, strong intelligence, intelligence, intelligence, creativity, constructive ability, talented talent, and the power of interesting surprises". 1633) and Andrew Marvel (1621-1678) are the other two famous writers of this era. For the rest, please see Luminarium
In the 17th century, British doctor and author Sir Thomas Brown wrote a short article on the interpretation of a dream. Interpretation of dreams is considered part of psychoanalysis at the end of the nineteenth century; it analyzes the perception of dreams and express content to reveal its potential meaning to the heart of dreams. One of the innovative works on this theme is "Dream" by Sigmund Freud. A paper published by Carey Morewedge and Michael Norton in 2009 to Journal of Personality and Social Psychology discovered that most people believe that their dreams reveal meaningful and hidden truths did. In studies conducted in the United States, Korea and India, they believe that 74% of Indians, 65% of Koreans, and 56% of Americans their dreams provide them with unconscious beliefs about them It was discovered. Meaning insight into desire