| Aristotelian Society (Great Britain) - 1915 - 464 pagine
...themselves ; if they had them they would express them in beautiful words, or otherwise, and thus pass them from " the obscure region of the soul into the clarity of the contemplative spirit." Beethoven's Ninth Symphony was his own intuition and his intuition was the Ninth Symphony. The artist,... | |
| Katharine Everett Gilbert - 1927 - 200 pagine
...famous words: "Be it pictorial, or verbal, or musical, or in whatever other form it appear, [expression] is, in fact, an inseparable part of intuition. How...at the same instant, because they are not two, but one."18 In his conception of aesthetic expression, then, Santayana not only limits the term to a part... | |
| Charles Carpenter Fries - 1927 - 210 pagine
...will furnish a basis for our statements. self his impressions and feelings, but only so far as he ia able to formulate them. Feelings or impressions, then,...soul into the clarity of the contemplative spirit." Croce, Esthetic, (trans. Ainslie), pp. 8 and 9. ". . . any number of impressions, from any number of... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - 1924 - 914 pagine
...only so far as ho is able to formulate them. Sentiments or impressions then, pass, by means of worda from the obscure region of the soul into the clarity of the contemplative spirif't "Intuitivo knowledge is expressive knowledge independent and autonomous in respect to intellectual... | |
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