What is Art?: Aesthetic Theory from Plato to Tolstoy, Том 10Alexander Sesonske Oxford University Press, 1965 - 428 страници |
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Страница 121
... Perception by the external Senses , occur to us as soon as we come into the World ; whence perhaps we easily look upon these Senses to be nat- ural ; but the Objects of the superior Senses of Beauty and Virtue generally do not . It is ...
... Perception by the external Senses , occur to us as soon as we come into the World ; whence perhaps we easily look upon these Senses to be nat- ural ; but the Objects of the superior Senses of Beauty and Virtue generally do not . It is ...
Страница 416
... perception . Religious perception in a society is like the direction of a flowing river . If the river flows at all , it must have a direction . If a society lives , there must be a religious perception indicating the direction in which ...
... perception . Religious perception in a society is like the direction of a flowing river . If the river flows at all , it must have a direction . If a society lives , there must be a religious perception indicating the direction in which ...
Страница 417
... perception - which , even in our times , is the guide always pres- ent where there is any progress . And if a religious perception exists amongst us , then our art should be appraised on the basis of that religious perception ; and , as ...
... perception - which , even in our times , is the guide always pres- ent where there is any progress . And if a religious perception exists amongst us , then our art should be appraised on the basis of that religious perception ; and , as ...
Съдържание
LONGINUS | 3 |
Greater Hippias 286a to end | 11 |
ARISTOTLE | 51 |
Авторско право | |
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Често срещани думи и фрази
abstract action aesthetic agreeable Apollonian appear Aristotle artist body cause character cognition colour composition concept contemplation definite delight Dionysian Dionysus distinct dithyramb divine effect emotion ence Enneads eral Euripides excite existence expression external fact faculty feeling genius give Glaucon harmony Hence Hesiod Hippias Homer human idea imagination imitation individual ject judge judgement of taste kind knowledge language matter means ment merely metre mind moral nature ness never object Odysseus pain painting particular passions perceive perception perfect person Pheidias Philosophy plastic art Plato pleases pleasure poem poet poetic poetry present principle produce prose pure qualities question reality reason relation representation rhapsode sensation Sense of Beauty sensuous sion Socrates Sophocles soul speak sublime things thought tion tive tragedy true truth ture understanding unity universal verse virtue whole words