The Sense of BeautyCosimo, Inc., 01/06/2004 - 288 páginas George Santayana, poet, philosopher, and literary and cultural critic, was one of the key figures in classical western philosophy. He was a man before his time . . . before the popularization of naturalism, multiculturalism, philosophy as literature, and spirituality without being a religious believer. "The Sense of Beauty" is a primary source for the study of aesthetics. Critics have described it as a milestone in aesthetic theory. Santayana's writings are thematically full of the relationships between literature, art, religion, and philosophy. |
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Página 3
... emotion . We have still to recognize in practice the truth that from these despised feelings of ours the great world ... emotional , that those who have taken moral problems to heart and felt their dignity have often been INTRODUCTION 3 ...
... emotion . We have still to recognize in practice the truth that from these despised feelings of ours the great world ... emotional , that those who have taken moral problems to heart and felt their dignity have often been INTRODUCTION 3 ...
Página 4
... emotion , and therefore considers the causes of events and their consequences as well as our judgments of their value . Esthetics also is apt to include the history and philosophy of art , and to add much descriptive and critical matter ...
... emotion , and therefore considers the causes of events and their consequences as well as our judgments of their value . Esthetics also is apt to include the history and philosophy of art , and to add much descriptive and critical matter ...
Página 5
... emotion . It is æsthetic or moral activity , while ethics and æsthetics , as sciences , are intel- lectual activities , having that aesthetic or moral activity for their subject - matter . The second method consists in the historical ...
... emotion . It is æsthetic or moral activity , while ethics and æsthetics , as sciences , are intel- lectual activities , having that aesthetic or moral activity for their subject - matter . The second method consists in the historical ...
Página 6
... emotions for which the needed soil is lacking in his constitution and experience ; and at the same time it would relieve us of any undue diffidence or excessive tolerance towards aberrations of taste , when we know what are the broader ...
... emotions for which the needed soil is lacking in his constitution and experience ; and at the same time it would relieve us of any undue diffidence or excessive tolerance towards aberrations of taste , when we know what are the broader ...
Página 8
... emotional experience lies behind us , and we have reached very general ideas both of nature and of life , our delight in any par- ticular object may consist in nothing but the thought that this object is a manifestation of universal ...
... emotional experience lies behind us , and we have reached very general ideas both of nature and of life , our delight in any par- ticular object may consist in nothing but the thought that this object is a manifestation of universal ...
Índice
1 | |
2 | |
3 | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 | |
8 | |
Form the unity of a manifold 24 Multiplicity in uniformity 25 Example of the stars | 100 |
Defects of pure multiplicity | 106 |
27 Esthetics of democracy | 110 |
Values of types and values of examples | 112 |
Origin of types | 116 |
The average modified in the direction of pleasure | 121 |
Are all things beautiful? | 126 |
Effects of indeterminate form 33 Example of landscape | 133 |
14 | |
16 | |
17 | |
Syntactical form | 43 |
its objectification | 44 |
Character as an æsthetic form | 45 |
Ideal characters | 46 |
The religious imagination PART IV | 47 |
Expression defined | 48 |
The definition of beauty | 49 |
Kinds of value in the second term | 50 |
Esthetic value in the second term | 51 |
Practical value in the same | 52 |
THE MATERIALS OF BEAUTY 12 All human functions may contribute to the sense of beauty 13 The influence of the passion of love | 53 |
The lower senses | 65 |
PAGE | 68 |
18 Materials surveyed | 76 |
FORM 19 There is a beauty of form | 82 |
Physiology of the perception of form 21 Values of geometrical figures | 88 |
Symmetry | 91 |
Extensions to objects usually not regarded æsthetically | 138 |
Further dangers of indeterminateness 36 The illusion of infinite perfection | 151 |
Organized nature the source of appercep tive forms | 152 |
Utility the principle of organization | 160 |
The authority of morals over æsthetics 56 Negative values in the second term 57 Influence of the first term in the pleasing expression of evil | 192 |
Mixture of other expressions including that of truth | 228 |
The liberation of self | 233 |
The sublime independent of the expression of evil | 236 |
The comic 233 239 | 245 |
62 | 246 |
Humour | 247 |
62 | 250 |
The grotesque | 256 |
The possibility of finite perfection 66 The stability of the ideal 256 | 258 |
CONCLUSION 266270 | 266 |
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275 | |
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Sense of Beauty: Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory George Santayana Visualização integral - 1896 |
The Sense of Beauty: Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory George Santayana Visualização integral - 1896 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
abstract aesthetic æsthetic value appeal apperception appreciation appropriate art Aristotle artist associations attention becomes cation ception character charm colour comic conceive consciousness constitute definite delight direction effect elements emotion ence epithets in Homer essence Esthetic education evil existence experience expression external fact fancy feel function give happiness human nature idea ideal imagination impressions indeterminate individual infinite instinct interest intrinsic judgments kind King Lear landscape Lebanon less material meaning ment mind moral ness never nomical object objectified observed organ Othello ourselves pain passion perceived perception perfection perhaps poet possible practical present principle reality reason relation remain retina rience romanticism satisfaction sensation sense sensuous sexual sion soul sound specific spontaneous stellar distances stimulation sublime suggestion Sybaris symbol symmetry taste tendency theory thetic things thought tical tion tive trinsic truth ugly unity utility vague virtue vision words
Passagens conhecidas
Página 19 - ... be noted, its relations would be observed, its recurrence might even be expected ; but all this would happen without a shadow of desire, of pleasure, or of regret. No event would be repulsive, no situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether, all value and excellence would be gone. So that for the existence of good in any form it is not merely consciousness but emotional consciousness...