Esthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic: Tr. from the Italian of Benedetto CroceMacmillan and Company, limited, 1909 - 403 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
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Pagina xxvii
... poets , actors , and writers of fiction have been rescued from their undeserved limbo by this valiant Red Cross knight , and now shine with due brilliance in the circle of their peers . It must also be admitted that a large number of ...
... poets , actors , and writers of fiction have been rescued from their undeserved limbo by this valiant Red Cross knight , and now shine with due brilliance in the circle of their peers . It must also be admitted that a large number of ...
Pagina xxviii
... poet Carducci there has been no influence in Italy to compare with that of Benedetto Croce . His dislike of Academies and of all forms of prejudice runs parallel with his breadth and sympathy with all forms of thought . His activity in ...
... poet Carducci there has been no influence in Italy to compare with that of Benedetto Croce . His dislike of Academies and of all forms of prejudice runs parallel with his breadth and sympathy with all forms of thought . His activity in ...
Pagina xxx
... poet , and if we take philosophy as Novalis understood it , certainly Croce does belong to the poets , though not to the formal category of those who write in verse . Croce is at any rate a born philosopher , and as every trade tends to ...
... poet , and if we take philosophy as Novalis understood it , certainly Croce does belong to the poets , though not to the formal category of those who write in verse . Croce is at any rate a born philosopher , and as every trade tends to ...
Pagina 13
... poet are verbal . But be it pictorial , or verbal , or musical , or whatever else it be called , to no intuition can expression be wanting , because it is an inseparable Illusions as to their part of intuition . How can 1 13 I INTUITION ...
... poet are verbal . But be it pictorial , or verbal , or musical , or whatever else it be called , to no intuition can expression be wanting , because it is an inseparable Illusions as to their part of intuition . How can 1 13 I INTUITION ...
Pagina 18
... poet , of the sculptor , of the musician , of the painter , of the prose writer : but how little , as compared with those who are so called , precisely because of the lofty degree in which they possess the most universal dispositions ...
... poet , of the sculptor , of the musician , of the painter , of the prose writer : but how little , as compared with those who are so called , precisely because of the lofty degree in which they possess the most universal dispositions ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Aesthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic Benedetto Croce Visualizzazione completa - 1922 |
Aesthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic Benedetto Croce Visualizzazione completa - 1922 |
Ęsthetic as Science of Expression and General Linguistic Benedetto Croce Visualizzazione completa - 1909 |
Parole e frasi comuni
abstract action admit ęsthetic activity ęsthetic fact ęstheticians affirmation already altogether appear arises Aristotle artistic and literary associationism Baumgarten beautiful Benedetto Croce called century colours comic complete concept concrete consciousness criticism Critique Critique of Judgment Croce definition distinction doctrine economic empirical empiricism error Esthetic ethical exist external fancy feeling genius hedonism hedonistic Hegel Herbart Hippias major human ideal ideas imagination impressions individual intellectual intellectualist intuitive knowledge judgment Kant knowledge language laws Leibnitz Linguistic logical looked lyric means merely metaphysical moral mystical natural sciences noumenon object painting perfect philosophy physical Plato pleasure Plotinus poet poetic poetry possess practical activity precisely problem production propositions pure intuition reality reason representation reproduction Sanctis Schelling Schleiermacher Schopenhauer scientific sensation sense Solger soul spirit spiritual activity taste theoretic theory things thought tion true truth ugly unity universal Vico Winckelmann word writers
Brani popolari
Pagina 1 - KNOWLEDGE HAS TWO FORMS: it is either intuitive knowledge or logical knowledge; knowledge obtained through the imagination or knowledge obtained through the intellect; knowledge of the individual or knowledge of the universal; of individual things or of the relations between them: it is, in fact, productive either of images or of concepts.
Pagina 6 - Intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible. ^ In our intuitions we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to external reality, but we simply objectify our impressions, whatever they be.
Pagina 113 - One can ask oneself how an ornament can be joined to expression. Externally ? In that case it must always remain separate. Internally? In that case, either it does not assist expression and mars it ; or it does form part of it and is not ornament, but a constituent element of expression, indistinguishable from the whole.
Pagina 35 - By elaborating his impressions, man frees himself from them. By objectifying them, he removes them from him and makes himself their superior. The liberating and purifying function of art is another aspect and another formula of its character as activity. Activity is the deliverer, just because it drives away passivity.
Pagina 84 - The true artist, in fact, finds himself big with his theme, he knows not how; he feels the moment of birth drawing near, but he cannot will it or not will it.
Pagina 27 - The proposition that art is imitation of nature has also several meanings. Sometimes truths have been expressed or at least shadowed forth in these words, sometimes errors have been promulgated. More frequently, no definite thought has been expressed at all. One of the scientifically legitimate meanings occurs when "imitation" is understood as representation or intuition of nature, a form of knowledge. And when the phrase is used with this intention, and in order to emphasize the spiritual character...
Pagina 22 - Certain men have a greater aptitude, a more frequent inclination fully to express certain complex states of the soul. These men are known in ordinary language as artists. Some very complicated and difficult expressions are not often achieved, and these are called works of art. The limits of the expression-intuitions that are called art, as opposed to those that are vulgarly called non-art, are empirical and impossible to define. If an epigram be art, why not a simple word?
Pagina 83 - If," he goes on : If after this we should open our mouths and will to open them, to speak, or our throats to sing, and declare in a loud voice and with extended throat what we have completely said or sung to ourselves ; or if we should stretch out and will to stretch out our hands to touch the notes of the piano, or to take up the brushes and the chisel, making thus in detail those movements which we have already done rapidly, and doing so in such a way as to leave more or less durable traces ; this...
Pagina 16 - This passage is sometimes far from easy. It has been observed by those who have best studied the psychology of artists that when, after having given a rapid glance at any one, they attempt to obtain a real intuition of him, in order, for example, to paint his portrait, then this ordinary vision, that seemed so precise, so lively, reveals itself as little better than nothing.
Pagina 3 - The impression of a moonlight scene by a painter; the outline of a country drawn by a cartographer; a musical motive, tender or energetic; the words of a sighing lyric, or those with which we ask, command and lament in ordinary life, may well all be intuitive facts without a shadow of intellectual relation.