Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 80
Pagina 125
To penetrate too far into the personality , to couple the outer effect with causes
that are too deepseated , would mean to endanger and in the end to sacrifice all
that was laughable in the effect . In order that we may be tempted to laugh at it ,
we ...
To penetrate too far into the personality , to couple the outer effect with causes
that are too deepseated , would mean to endanger and in the end to sacrifice all
that was laughable in the effect . In order that we may be tempted to laugh at it ,
we ...
Pagina 198
If the direct effect were absent , and the object in itself uninteresting , the
circumstances would be immaterial . Molière's Misanthrope says to the court poet
who commends his sonnet as written in a quarter of an hour , Voyons , monsieur ,
le ...
If the direct effect were absent , and the object in itself uninteresting , the
circumstances would be immaterial . Molière's Misanthrope says to the court poet
who commends his sonnet as written in a quarter of an hour , Voyons , monsieur ,
le ...
Pagina 277
Now , to approach the matter from the other direction , I cannot think that when
Gurney and Hanslick say that music has “ no meaning " they intend to say that it
should have no meaning in the sense of no evoked effects , that its effect upon
the ...
Now , to approach the matter from the other direction , I cannot think that when
Gurney and Hanslick say that music has “ no meaning " they intend to say that it
should have no meaning in the sense of no evoked effects , that its effect upon
the ...
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Sommario
Desire and the Unconscious | 127 |
Emotion and Pleasure | 180 |
Sensuous Elements and Esthetic | 245 |
Copyright | |
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abstract action activity actual appears appreciation artist aspect associations attitude balance beauty become called causes character color complete connection consciousness contemplation course created criticism definition described desire direct discourse Distance distinction distinguished dream effect elements emotion empathy esthetic example existence experience expression external fact feeling give given hand human ideas imagination important individual interest isolation kind knowledge language less live look material matter means merely mind moral move nature object organic original painting particular patterns perception physical picture play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry possible practical present principle produce pure question reality reason reference relation represents result scientific seems sense shape significant simply social sound speak suggest theory things thought tion true truth understand unity universal whole