| 1913 - 532 pagine
...the book is in its failure to make intuition primarily and plainly apprehension. We are told that ' in our intuitions we do not oppose ourselves to external...simply objectify our impressions, whatever they be.' This criticism shews the important connexion between these aesthetic discussions and the philosophy... | |
| 1919 - 1030 pagine
...attain the virtue of clarity. We still have our intuitions. "The intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible. In intuition we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to the external reality, but objectify without... | |
| Aristotelian Society (Great Britain) - 1915 - 464 pagine
...unreality is altogether extraneous to the true nature of intuition. " Intuition is the undift'erentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible." But if the " perception of the real " and the " simple image of the possible " be in any respect different... | |
| Herbert Wildon Carr - 1917 - 234 pagine
...consciousness, for where everything is real nothing is real. " The intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible. In intuition we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to the external reality, but objectify without... | |
| K. M. Khadye - 1922 - 84 pagine
...imagine. These images are intuitions. To put it in Croce's words, intuition " is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real, and of the simple image of the possible. " This is the key-stone of the whole of his philosophy. Intuitions are produced by the intuitive or... | |
| Fred Wellington Ruckstull - 1925 - 738 pagine
...begun making definitions and tried also to define "intuition," thus: Intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple...possible. In our intuitions we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to external reality, but we simply objectify our impressions, whatever they be.... | |
| Fred Wellington Ruckstull - 1925 - 746 pagine
...begun making definitions and tried also to define ''intuition," thus: Intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple...possible. In our intuitions we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to external reality, but we simply objectify our impressions, whatever they be.... | |
| 1928 - 674 pagine
...fantasy as well as the reality that is given in sense perception. " The intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible."1 It can be said that the artistic activity is not concerned with the question of the reality... | |
| Albert Rothenberg, Carl R. Hausman - 1976 - 388 pagine
...vague and only remotely approximate idea of this ingenuous state. Intuition is the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple...possible. In our intuitions we do not oppose ourselves as empirical beings to external reality, but we simply objectify our impressions, whatever they be.... | |
| René Wellek - 1955 - 388 pagine
...is not "perception," which is always the apprehension of something real. It is "the undifferentiated unity of the perception of the real and of the simple image of the possible" (E, 6). Intuition is thus a far wider category than what we ordinarily call art. Although Croce 's... | |
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