A Modern Book of Esthetics: An AnthologyMelvin Miller Rader Holt, 1952 - 602 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 78
Pagina 128
... play , however , requires order and control . A directing spirit , man's esthetic taste , controls the spontaneous flow of imagery in which imagi- native play consists . Art is thus form imposed by taste upon playful imagistic activity ...
... play , however , requires order and control . A directing spirit , man's esthetic taste , controls the spontaneous flow of imagery in which imagi- native play consists . Art is thus form imposed by taste upon playful imagistic activity ...
Pagina 133
... play very seriously and expends a great deal of emotion on it . The opposite of play is not serious occupation but - reality . Notwithstanding the large affec- tive cathexis1 of his play - world , the child distinguishes it perfectly ...
... play very seriously and expends a great deal of emotion on it . The opposite of play is not serious occupation but - reality . Notwithstanding the large affec- tive cathexis1 of his play - world , the child distinguishes it perfectly ...
Pagina 202
... Play We have here , then , an important element of the distinc- tion between esthetic and moral values . It is the same that has been pointed to in the famous contrast between work and play . These terms may be used in different senses ...
... Play We have here , then , an important element of the distinc- tion between esthetic and moral values . It is the same that has been pointed to in the famous contrast between work and play . These terms may be used in different senses ...
Sommario
Intuition | 89 |
Desire and the Unconscious | 127 |
Emotion and Pleasure | 180 |
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abstract action activity actual appears appreciation artist aspect associations attitude balance beauty become called cause character color complete connection consciousness 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 images imagination important individual interest intuition judgments kind knowledge language less live look material matter means merely mind moral move nature never object organic original painting particular patterns perception physical picture play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry possible practical present principle produce pure question reality reason relation represents result scientific seems sense shape significant simply social sound speak theory things thought tion true truth understand unity universal whole