Philosophical Studies, Ausgabe 9Cath. University of America Press, 1918 |
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Seite 8
... appeal to persons who differ widely in their individual views ( xix 304 ) . Always , however , must it be re- membered that mankind in general refuses instruction unless it is given in a pleasing form ( xix 366 ) ; and that a chief pur ...
... appeal to persons who differ widely in their individual views ( xix 304 ) . Always , however , must it be re- membered that mankind in general refuses instruction unless it is given in a pleasing form ( xix 366 ) ; and that a chief pur ...
Seite 13
... appeal it makes to mankind . This appeal is not to be had from beauty of form alone , and each work must contain something beyond that exerts the desired influence . There should be first of all an atmosphere of genial human nature ...
... appeal it makes to mankind . This appeal is not to be had from beauty of form alone , and each work must contain something beyond that exerts the desired influence . There should be first of all an atmosphere of genial human nature ...
Seite 14
... appeal to his lower nature , but never to his higher sense of beauty , and can- not elevate the mind . It is terrible rather than beautiful and leaves no aspirations to anything higher ( xix 49 , 339 ) : it does not uplift and therefore ...
... appeal to his lower nature , but never to his higher sense of beauty , and can- not elevate the mind . It is terrible rather than beautiful and leaves no aspirations to anything higher ( xix 49 , 339 ) : it does not uplift and therefore ...
Seite 18
... appeal to all that is good and true in the heart of mankind . and have true literary worth . ( Ibid . ) 3. THE AUTHOR The intimate connection between literature and society nat- urally affects strongly the position of the writer with ...
... appeal to all that is good and true in the heart of mankind . and have true literary worth . ( Ibid . ) 3. THE AUTHOR The intimate connection between literature and society nat- urally affects strongly the position of the writer with ...
Seite 29
... appeal to our lower nature through it . The art that tends to gratify perverse tendencies instead of tranquillizing passions is only too fre- quent . Beauty as such appeals directly not to our intellect or our will but to the ...
... appeal to our lower nature through it . The art that tends to gratify perverse tendencies instead of tranquillizing passions is only too fre- quent . Beauty as such appeals directly not to our intellect or our will but to the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
aesthetic principles agree with Brownson analysis of beauty appeal art xix artistic activity artistic genius artistic intuition beautiful xix beholders Biographia Literaria Brother Azarias Catholic common concept considered creative critic Croce Doctor of Philosophy Douglas Ainslie Dublin Review eral Essays essence of art ethics Everyman's Library exists exterior form external form fact faculty false form of art Francis Thompson give Hence higher human interest human nature human race Ibid idea ideal identical Imagist imitation individual influence inseparable inspiration instinctive intellect internal expression judge judgment latter literary artist Lyrical Ballads mankind means mental vision merely mind mission of literature moral object ontological ordinary persons philosophy poet poetry positive presence of artistic production prose question reader reason relation religious novel Review says sense sensibility sentiments social society soul spirit spiritual worthiness supernatural theory thought tion true art truth tuition words writer