The science of beautyTrubner, 1881 |
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... ourselves , nor can we accept each other's explanation . All explanations differ in a measure vitally or slightly , and it is impossible to accept one theory without rejecting all the others . Another remarkable fact in our nature is ...
... ourselves , nor can we accept each other's explanation . All explanations differ in a measure vitally or slightly , and it is impossible to accept one theory without rejecting all the others . Another remarkable fact in our nature is ...
Страница 4
... ourselves . This is the all but unanimous verdict of modern philosophy , and it appears to admit of no extenuation . This is the great stronghold of Idealism , and though the attacks made upon that doctrine have been many , fierce , and ...
... ourselves . This is the all but unanimous verdict of modern philosophy , and it appears to admit of no extenuation . This is the great stronghold of Idealism , and though the attacks made upon that doctrine have been many , fierce , and ...
Страница 6
... ourselves to the psychology of æsthetic phenomena . There is no beauty inherent in an object , because , granted that there were , how could we ever find it out ? We know that an object is the cause of sensations in us ; beyond this we ...
... ourselves to the psychology of æsthetic phenomena . There is no beauty inherent in an object , because , granted that there were , how could we ever find it out ? We know that an object is the cause of sensations in us ; beyond this we ...
Страница 25
... ourselves of this accumulation and begin again - hoc opus , hic labor . The action of light renders the optic nerve less sensitive to light , the action of shape renders it less sensitive to shape , and the action of sound renders the ...
... ourselves of this accumulation and begin again - hoc opus , hic labor . The action of light renders the optic nerve less sensitive to light , the action of shape renders it less sensitive to shape , and the action of sound renders the ...
Страница 29
... ourselves , and in so far as it seems to be a quality in objects it is we that make it , and are by our nature necessitated to make it , seem so ; and , secondly , that shape and motion are like- wise sensations in ourselves , and so ...
... ourselves , and in so far as it seems to be a quality in objects it is we that make it , and are by our nature necessitated to make it , seem so ; and , secondly , that shape and motion are like- wise sensations in ourselves , and so ...
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æsthetic analogies appear associations Author beauty birds called capable cause Chinese cloth College colour contempt countenance Crown 8vo Demy 8vo DICTIONARY disgust emotion of admiration English Essay F. W. Newman fact Falstaff Fcap feeling flowers George Henry Lewes German GRAMMAR Henry History human Illustrations India innate power intellect inutility inverse J. G. Fichte Joseph Edkins LANGUAGE less light LL.D look matter Max Müller mean ment mind moral motion nature never Notes object odour ornament ourselves Percy Greg persons phenomena physiognomy Plates pleasant poem poet poetic poetry Post 8vo Post free principle Professor qualities Ralph T. H. Griffith recognise RELIGION retina Royal 8vo Sanskrit Second Edition sensations sewed shape Songs star sublime suggested power things thou thought tion Translated ugly unpleasant utility vibrations viii Vocabulary W. R. Greg words
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