The Philosophy of the Beautiful: Its historyCharles Scribner's Sons, 1891 |
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Página viii
... mind , as every one knows , in which one does not require a theory of Beauty ; but neither , in these moods , do we require a theory of the True , or of the Good . It must also be admitted that when our intellectual discern- ment is ...
... mind , as every one knows , in which one does not require a theory of Beauty ; but neither , in these moods , do we require a theory of the True , or of the Good . It must also be admitted that when our intellectual discern- ment is ...
Página x
... mind of the race , while dealing with the problems of Philosophy , has an almost equal interest . To the student of History , these are not only links in a chain which can never be completed , they are also the pro- gressive unfolding ...
... mind of the race , while dealing with the problems of Philosophy , has an almost equal interest . To the student of History , these are not only links in a chain which can never be completed , they are also the pro- gressive unfolding ...
Página 2
... mind of the race has from the first been struggling , as it were , with ideas on the subject of the Beautiful - ideas which it has never been able fully to grasp , but which it has discerned for a time , then dropped or lost sight of ...
... mind of the race has from the first been struggling , as it were , with ideas on the subject of the Beautiful - ideas which it has never been able fully to grasp , but which it has discerned for a time , then dropped or lost sight of ...
Página 5
... mind of the race , the sequences of national development would , however , be lost to view ; and the progress of the Philosophy of each nation , within its own area , and its characteristic type of Art , are quite as significant as is ...
... mind of the race , the sequences of national development would , however , be lost to view ; and the progress of the Philosophy of each nation , within its own area , and its characteristic type of Art , are quite as significant as is ...
Página 15
... mind had no appreciation of the Beauty of Nature for its own sake . If the peasantry ever thought of such things as " the sweet influence of the Pleiades , " it would be from some utilitarian reason connected with their life as ...
... mind had no appreciation of the Beauty of Nature for its own sake . If the peasantry ever thought of such things as " the sweet influence of the Pleiades , " it would be from some utilitarian reason connected with their life as ...
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Términos y frases comunes
absolute Beauty æsthetic Aesthetik affirms amongst analysis appreciation Architecture Aristotle artist association Beau Beautiful in Nature beautiful things century chapter charm colour criticism deals Descartes discussion distinct divine doctrine element emotion Encyclopédie essay essence Esthetics ethical Euphranor exists expression faculty feeling French gives Grammar of Ornament Greece Greek harmony Hegel Hippias human idea of Beauty ideal imagination imitation individual intellectual Kant latter laws line of Beauty literature Lucretius Max Müller metaphysical mind moral Neoplatonic objects original ornament Painting perceive perception perfect Phidias philosophy picturesque Plato pleasure Plotinus poet poetry principle of Beauty Proclus proportion published qualities race realised recognised refers says Schelling Sculpture sense of Beauty Socrates Solger soul speculative sphere spirit subject of Beauty sublime symmetry taste teaching thinks thought tion treatise true truth ugly unity universal Uvedale Price variety Vitruvius writer wrote καὶ
Pasajes populares
Página 152 - Beauty is no quality in things themselves; it exists merely in the mind which contemplates them ; and each mind perceives a different beauty.
Página viii - Myself when young did eagerly frequent Doctor and Saint, and heard great argument About it and about : but evermore Came out by the same door where in I went...
Página 267 - The statement of details is meant to illustrate the working of general laws, and the development of principles; while the historical evolution of the subject dealt with is kept in view, along with its philosophical significance.
Página 37 - Filii: nam ad pulchritudinem tria requiruntur. Primo quidem integritas sive perfectio; quae enim diminuta sunt, hoc ipso turpia sunt; et debita proportio sive consonantia; et iterum claritas. Unde quae habent colorem nitidum, pulchra esse dicuntur.
Página 247 - We ascribe beauty to that which is simple; which has no superfluous parts; which exactly answers its end; which stands related to all things; which is the mean of many extremes.
Página 25 - ... beauty absolute, separate, simple, and everlasting, which without diminution and without increase, or any change, is imparted to the evergrowing and perishing beauties of all other things.
Página 37 - Et animadvertebam, et videbam in ipsis corporibus aliud esse quasi totum et ideo pulchrum, aliud autem, quod ideo deceret, quoniam apte accommodaretur alicui, sicut pars corporis ad universum suum aut calciamentum ad pedem et similia.
Página 272 - ALCUIN, and the Rise of the Christian Schools. By Professor ANDREW F. WEST, Ph.D.
Página 275 - CENTS PER DAY will be incurred by the borrower. The charge for this book may be renewed if no one is waiting for it.
Página 157 - From what has been said, it may be inferred, that the works of nature, if we compare one species with another, are all equally beautiful ; and that preference is given from custom, or some association of ideas ; and that, in creatures of the same species, beauty is the medium or centre of all its various forms.