The Arts of the BeautifulScribner, 1965 - 189 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 27
Pagina 59
... conceive it as an intui- tion creating its object . The idea then is no longer conceived as the mere prototype of a possible object for the artist to know and to imitate , but , rather , as the form , immanent in the artist's imagi ...
... conceive it as an intui- tion creating its object . The idea then is no longer conceived as the mere prototype of a possible object for the artist to know and to imitate , but , rather , as the form , immanent in the artist's imagi ...
Pagina 96
... conceived as undi- vided from itself , so that to produce unity is to produce being . Let us recall Leibniz ' often quoted formula , whose meaning de- pends on the mere shifting of an accent : it is one and the same thing to be one ...
... conceived as undi- vided from itself , so that to produce unity is to produce being . Let us recall Leibniz ' often quoted formula , whose meaning de- pends on the mere shifting of an accent : it is one and the same thing to be one ...
Pagina 106
... conceived only as a mere possibility , the work of art is born of an incarnated mind , incarnating in a mate- rial body a form it has conceived . Only in teaching and in esthetics can the domain of art be mistaken for that of knowledge ...
... conceived only as a mere possibility , the work of art is born of an incarnated mind , incarnating in a mate- rial body a form it has conceived . Only in teaching and in esthetics can the domain of art be mistaken for that of knowledge ...
Sommario
2 | 24 |
COROLLARIES IN ESTHETICS | 35 |
INTUITION EXPRESSION SYMBOLISM | 56 |
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A. E. Housman abstract abstract art activity apprehension Aristotle artist become called cause Christian Church cognition colors conceived Council of Nicaea create creation creative critic define Demiurge distinction divine Divine Comedy emotions essence essentially esthetic experience ethics existence express fact factivity feel function genius Goethe Greek idea ideal images imitation inasmuch insofar intellect intelligible invention judgments Kant kind knowledge language Leibniz Lucretius masterpiece material matter means metaphysics mind modern musician nature never Nietzsche notion object ontology operations painter painting Paul Valéry perfect philistinism philoso philosophers philosophy of art Plato pleasure poem poet poetic poetry poietic possible precisely principle problem produce prose pure reality reason religion remark Saint sake sculpture seminal form sense sort speak symbol teach theologians Thomas Aquinas thought tion transcendental true truth unity Valéry verse words worship write