aesthesis " properly signifies mere sensual perception of the outward qualities and necessary effects of bodies, in which sense only, if we would arrive at any accurate conclusions on this difficult subject, it should always be used. But I wholly deny... Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Página 3321851Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| 1851 - 776 páginas
...' .(Esthetic,' which is the one commonly employed with reference to it. " Now the term ' acsthesis' properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...be used. But I wholly deny that the impressions of beanty are in any way icntual ; — they are neither sensual nor intellectual, but moral ; and for... | |
| John Ruskin - 1862 - 240 páginas
...theoretic " aesthetic, which is the one commonly employed with reference to it. Now the term " aesthesis" properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...deny that the impressions of beauty are in any way sensual,—they are neither sensual nor intellectual, but moral, and for the faculty receiving them,... | |
| John Ruskin - 1866 - 244 páginas
...for aesthetic, which is the one commonly employed with reference to it. 'Now the term " sesthesis" properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...difference from mere perception I shall immediately endeavor to explain, no term can be more accurate or convenient than that employed by the Greeks, "... | |
| Royal institution of Great Britain - 1872 - 628 páginas
...sentence before the first one I have quoted he explains that "sesthesis," or the fflsthetic faculty, properly signifies mere sensual perception of the outward qualities and necessary effects of bodies, which, although true, slightly degrades the meaning of the word sesthetic, which may surely be applied... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1872 - 610 páginas
...sentence before the first one I have quoted he explains that " aasthesis," or the aesthetic faculty, properly signifies mere sensual perception of the outward qualities and necessary effects of bodies, which, although true, slightly degrades the meaning of the word aesthetic, which may surely be applied... | |
| John Ruskin - 1879 - 260 páginas
...for aesthetic, which is the one commonly employed with reference to it. Now the term " resthesis " properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...difference from mere perception I shall immediately endeavor to explain, no term can be more accurate or convenient than that employed by the Greeks, "... | |
| Sir Edward John Poynter (bart.) - 1879 - 304 páginas
...before the one first quoted as equivalent to " aesthetic ; " " the term ' aesthesis,' " he writes, " properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...outward qualities and necessary effects of bodies." This, although true, slightly degrades the meaning of the word aesthetic, which may surely be applied... | |
| Sir Edward John Poynter (bart.) - 1879 - 306 páginas
...before the one first quoted as equivalent to " aesthetic ; " " the term ' sesthesis,' " he writes, "properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...outward qualities and necessary effects of bodies." This, although true, slightly degrades the meaning of the word aesthetic, which may surely be applied... | |
| John Ruskin - 1885 - 654 páginas
...for aesthetic, which is the one commonly employed with reference to it. Now the term " aesthesis " properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...difference from mere perception I shall immediately endeavor to explain, no term can be more accurate or convenient than that employed by the Greeks, "... | |
| John Ruskin - 1885 - 390 páginas
....Esthetic," which is the one commonly (now *) employed with reference to it. Now the term " aesthesis " properly signifies mere sensual perception of the...wholly deny that the impressions of beauty are in * (It was, of course, never so used by good or scholarly English writers, nor ever could be.) CHAP.... | |
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