The Arts of the BeautifulGreenwood Press, 1976 - 189 pagine -- First paperback edition.-- A lucid and deft argument for art as "the making of beauty for beauty's own sake", The Arts of the Beautiful brilliantly addresses the dominant notion of art as an act of expression or communication. Gilson maintains that art is not a matter of knowing, but that it belongs to an order other than that of knowledge, the order of making.-- A world-renowned philosopher and historian, Etienne Gilson held the position of Professor of Medieval Philosophy at the Sorbonne and subsequently at the College de France. He helped to found the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. He is the author of many works, including Forms and Substance in the Arts, The Philosopher and Theology, and The Spirit of Medieval Philosophy.-- First published by Charles Scribner's Sons ('65). Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved. |
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Pagina 90
... Demiurge in the Timaeus than the creator of Genesis such as the Christian tradition represents him . The artist brings his activity to bear upon a matter whose existence is implied , just as language itself is pre - existent to poetry ...
... Demiurge in the Timaeus than the creator of Genesis such as the Christian tradition represents him . The artist brings his activity to bear upon a matter whose existence is implied , just as language itself is pre - existent to poetry ...
Pagina 128
... Demiurge . But who is that diligent worker who makes the world with his eyes fixed on Ideas ? Of what intelligi- ble notion is he the symbol ? We do not know . The summit of Plato's universe is not the Demiurge , but the Idea of Good ...
... Demiurge . But who is that diligent worker who makes the world with his eyes fixed on Ideas ? Of what intelligi- ble notion is he the symbol ? We do not know . The summit of Plato's universe is not the Demiurge , but the Idea of Good ...
Pagina 143
... Demiurge " did not envy " creatures his own perfection . A God might not begrudge his possible creatures any amount of perfec- tion , and this for a whole eternity , without ever creating them . The God suggested by metaphysical ...
... Demiurge " did not envy " creatures his own perfection . A God might not begrudge his possible creatures any amount of perfec- tion , and this for a whole eternity , without ever creating them . The God suggested by metaphysical ...
Sommario
INTRODUCTION | 9 |
THE ARTS OF THE BEAUTIFUL | 17 |
COROLLARIES IN ESTHETICS | 35 |
Copyright | |
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