Philosophical Studies, Ausgabe 9Cath. University of America Press, 1918 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 23
Seite 8
... never be sought for its own sake ( xix 208 ) ; in fact , not even for the sake of the ' pleasures of wit , taste , and imagination it may bring . ' ( Ibid . ) Works that have no end beyond that of satisfying the literary taste of ...
... never be sought for its own sake ( xix 208 ) ; in fact , not even for the sake of the ' pleasures of wit , taste , and imagination it may bring . ' ( Ibid . ) Works that have no end beyond that of satisfying the literary taste of ...
Seite 14
... 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 runs counter to the purpose of ...
... 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 runs counter to the purpose of ...
Seite 21
... never uttered before— since that would almost preclude all possibility of being orig- inal . It means rather just what we have stated above , that the truths the writer expresses must come from the innermost depths of his heart , must ...
... never uttered before— since that would almost preclude all possibility of being orig- inal . It means rather just what we have stated above , that the truths the writer expresses must come from the innermost depths of his heart , must ...
Seite 25
... never to be feared ' in themselves , and the theory of the his- torian should always remain ' within the order of facts , ' should be merely a theory according to which the facts are explained and arranged ( xix 383 , 386 ) . But there ...
... never to be feared ' in themselves , and the theory of the his- torian should always remain ' within the order of facts , ' should be merely a theory according to which the facts are explained and arranged ( xix 383 , 386 ) . But there ...
Seite 28
... never sufficient ( xix 123 ) , and hence arises the mission of art as an impelling power , a mission beyond the mere presentation of beauty . Nor is it correct to say that art should aim merely at develop- ing the natural powers of man ...
... never sufficient ( xix 123 ) , and hence arises the mission of art as an impelling power , a mission beyond the mere presentation of beauty . Nor is it correct to say that art should aim merely at develop- ing the natural powers of man ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
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