Aesthetic as Science of Expression and General LinguisticNoonday Press, 1953 - 503 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 75
Pagina 76
... pleasure of art and that of easy digestion , between the pleasure of a good action and that of breathing the fresh air with wide - expanded lungs . But if the activity of feeling in the sense here defined must not be substituted for all ...
... pleasure of art and that of easy digestion , between the pleasure of a good action and that of breathing the fresh air with wide - expanded lungs . But if the activity of feeling in the sense here defined must not be substituted for all ...
Pagina 80
... pleasure is felt , and others , perhaps even failures , which give him the greatest pleasure , we must recommend him to concentrate his attention in the ęsthetic fact , upon that which is truly ęsthetic pleasure . Esthetic pleasure is ...
... pleasure is felt , and others , perhaps even failures , which give him the greatest pleasure , we must recommend him to concentrate his attention in the ęsthetic fact , upon that which is truly ęsthetic pleasure . Esthetic pleasure is ...
Pagina 252
... pleasure , no doubt we do find poetry pleasant ; but the idea that the poet's motive is merely to excite pleasure cannot be condemned too strongly . " Homer's gods were as essential and indispensable to the poet's world as the forces of ...
... pleasure , no doubt we do find poetry pleasant ; but the idea that the poet's motive is merely to excite pleasure cannot be condemned too strongly . " Homer's gods were as essential and indispensable to the poet's world as the forces of ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Aesthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic Benedetto Croce Visualizzazione estratti - 1967 |
Ęsthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic Benedetto Croce Visualizzazione estratti - 1966 |
Aesthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic: Translated from ... Croce Benedetto Anteprima non disponibile - 2015 |
Parole e frasi comuni
abstract according action activity ęsthetic already ancient appearance artistic attempt beauty become called century character concept confused consists criticism definition determinate distinction distinguished doctrine element error Esthetic example exist expression fact faculty feeling figures genius give given hand human ideal ideas imagination imitation important impressions individual intellectual intuition Italy judgement Kant kinds knowledge language laws less limits Linguistic literary logical matter means method mind moral nature never object observations origin painting particular perfection philosophy physical pleasing pleasure poet Poetics poetry possess possible practical present principle problem produced pure question reality reason recognize relation represent representation Rhetoric scientific sense sensible side sometimes speak spirit taste theoretical theory things thought tion true truth ugly universal various writers