The science of beautyTrubner, 1881 |
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Page 4
... appear , therefore , how we can know anything about the metaphysically innate qualities of objects - supposing such ... appears to admit of no extenuation . This is the great stronghold of Idealism , and though the attacks made upon that ...
... appear , therefore , how we can know anything about the metaphysically innate qualities of objects - supposing such ... appears to admit of no extenuation . This is the great stronghold of Idealism , and though the attacks made upon that ...
Page 7
... appear to be two ; and unless they are accurately discriminated -whatever be their metaphysical value - it is impossible to arrive at a true analysis of the subject . One of these factors is attributed to the object ; the other is ...
... appear to be two ; and unless they are accurately discriminated -whatever be their metaphysical value - it is impossible to arrive at a true analysis of the subject . One of these factors is attributed to the object ; the other is ...
Page 8
... appears that the inquiry should commence with them and not with their counterparts , the objective qualities . In investigating virtue , we should , as it seems to me , begin by asking , What is approbation , or the effect which virtue ...
... appears that the inquiry should commence with them and not with their counterparts , the objective qualities . In investigating virtue , we should , as it seems to me , begin by asking , What is approbation , or the effect which virtue ...
Page 16
... appears to be a particularly grateful and attrac- tive colour , probably on account of its calorific effect upon the retina . A soldier in a scarlet coat , while walking along the street , is looked at by perhaps ten times as many ...
... appears to be a particularly grateful and attrac- tive colour , probably on account of its calorific effect upon the retina . A soldier in a scarlet coat , while walking along the street , is looked at by perhaps ten times as many ...
Page 19
... appear to be in the same plane ; had we never felt or fingered anything spherical , an orange would appear circular but flat ; had we never felt anything cubical , dice would seem square but flat , and so on . 66 But if shape be a ...
... appear to be in the same plane ; had we never felt or fingered anything spherical , an orange would appear circular but flat ; had we never felt anything cubical , dice would seem square but flat , and so on . 66 But if shape be a ...
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Common terms and phrases
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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