Meaning and Truth in the ArtsUniversity of North Carolina Press, 1946 - 252 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 65
Pagina 10
... simply repeated , or it will become monotonous , nor can entirely different material be continually introduced , since then there would be no unity but only a bewildering succession of differences ; repetition must be repetition with a ...
... simply repeated , or it will become monotonous , nor can entirely different material be continually introduced , since then there would be no unity but only a bewildering succession of differences ; repetition must be repetition with a ...
Pagina 35
... simply as con- ventions ; we say , " What's the connection between that set of sounds and Siegfried ? Wouldn't another have done better ? I don't see any connection between them . Why is this motif more appropriate than that ? " We look ...
... simply as con- ventions ; we say , " What's the connection between that set of sounds and Siegfried ? Wouldn't another have done better ? I don't see any connection between them . Why is this motif more appropriate than that ? " We look ...
Pagina 109
... simply to " illustrate " a program ( as in the case of Beethoven's Battle Symphony ) ; the thick esthetic values are , so to speak , " fused " with the thin . Similarly in painting , when a painting simply depends on its subject ...
... simply to " illustrate " a program ( as in the case of Beethoven's Battle Symphony ) ; the thick esthetic values are , so to speak , " fused " with the thin . Similarly in painting , when a painting simply depends on its subject ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
actual already appear apply artist assertion association attitude beauty become certain certainly Chapter character colors common composition convention course critics defined definite described discussed distinction effect element emotions entirely essence esthetic evoke example existence experience expression fact feeling give given hand hear historical human illustration imaginative imitate important interest kind knowledge language least less listener literature material matter meaning medium merely mind namely nature never notes novel objects observations occur once painter painting particular perception person picture poem poet poetic poetry possible present Professor propositions pure question reality refer relation relevant represent representational require reveal seems seen sense significant simply situation sometimes sounds speak stand statements subject-matter suggest surface symbols term theme theory things tion true true-to truth universal usage vision whole words