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" We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation, real or imaginary, is not conformable to that -which is required... "
History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century - Página 147
por Jean Henri Merle d'Aubigné, Henry Beveridge - 1845
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Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects, Volumen1

David Hume - 1804 - 592 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his examination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation, real...
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Essays, moral, political, and literary

David Hume - 1809 - 868 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his exar mination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation, real...
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Philosophical Works, Volumen3

David Hume - 1854 - 586 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his examination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons whose situation, real...
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Literature of the English Language: Comprising Representative Selections ...

Ephraim Hunt - 1872 - 658 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his examination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and can not be fully relished by persons whose situation, real...
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History and revelation, the correspondence of the predictions of ..., Volumen3

James H. Braund - 1875 - 606 páginas
...and light was.' It is VOL. III. GG often necessary that a truth, in order to produce its true eflect on the mind, must be repeatedly presented to it. Luther...righteousness which alone can stand in the presence of God [or be without fault before his throne] ; now he receives from God himself, by the hand of Christ,...
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Art and Its Significance: An Anthology of Aesthetic Theory, First Edition

Stephen David Ross - 1984 - 590 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his examination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation; real...
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The Cambridge Companion to Hume

David Fate Norton - 1993 - 420 páginas
...supposes," and "obstinately maintains his natural position." Hume insists that "every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation, real...
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The Sixth Canon: Belletristic Rhetorical Theory and Its French Antecedents

Barbara Warnick - 1993 - 204 páginas
...genius."22 Fifth, the "true judge" should be free of prejudice. Hume observed that "every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be relished by persons, whose situation, real or imaginary,...
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Authenticities: Philosophical Reflections on Musical Performance

Peter Kivy - 1995 - 324 páginas
...David Hume's ever-intriguing essay "Of the Standard of Taste." We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons whose situation, real...
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Religion and Faction in Hume's Moral Philosophy

Jennifer A. Herdt - 1997 - 322 páginas
...but the very object which is submitted to his examination. We may observe, that every work of art, in order to produce its due effect on the mind, must be surveyed in a certain point of view, and cannot be fully relished by persons, whose situation, real...
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