A Study in AestheticsMacmillan, 1954 - 415 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 80
Pagina 148
... merely the same thing , being identical with nothing more than ' doing your work well ' . In a very right reaction against the ornate , there is a tendency to go to the opposite extreme and to become mawkish about efficiency . As ...
... merely the same thing , being identical with nothing more than ' doing your work well ' . In a very right reaction against the ornate , there is a tendency to go to the opposite extreme and to become mawkish about efficiency . As ...
Pagina 304
... merely unpleasant . The same generally seems to be true of the values we call moral or immoral . It is , as has been said , hard to draw a line between this and the previous case . But we should agree , I suppose , that hideous cruelty ...
... merely unpleasant . The same generally seems to be true of the values we call moral or immoral . It is , as has been said , hard to draw a line between this and the previous case . But we should agree , I suppose , that hideous cruelty ...
Pagina 393
... merely impute meanings , as we do to works of art . It may be that nature , to the nature - lover who reflects , appears to be full of beauty in her very body , as art does not appear to be to the art - lover , merely because she has ...
... merely impute meanings , as we do to works of art . It may be that nature , to the nature - lover who reflects , appears to be full of beauty in her very body , as art does not appear to be to the art - lover , merely because she has ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
activity aesthetic experience aesthetic expression aesthetic fusion aesthetic imagination aesthetic object appear appreciation apprehend Aristotle artist asserted association beauty and ugliness body called certainly Chapter character classicism Clive Bell cognition colours common complex conscious contemplation course critic Croce degrees difficult drama effect embodied emotions essential example exist fact feeling fulfilment function fused hand human I. A. Richards Ibid idea imagination imitation implies important interest kind knowledge Lascelles Abercrombie Martin Secker matter mental merely mind moral nature non-aesthetic painting perceived object perception perfection of expression perhaps perspective philosopher picture poem poetry pornography possess possible primary subject-matter problem programme music proposition psychological question realise reality relation revealed Roger Fry romanticism sensa sense sense data sensuous significance sometimes sounds speaking suggest teleological terminal object tertiary subject-matter theory things tion tragedy true truth unity unpleasant values vision words