Art and Philosophy: Readings in AestheticsW. E. Kennick St. Martin's Press, 1964 - 674 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 79 筆
第 51 頁
... material is as important as imaginal , it is also true that all material there has the status of the image ; that is to say , it has the same freedom from reference to the physical world of action that is possessed by images , as in a ...
... material is as important as imaginal , it is also true that all material there has the status of the image ; that is to say , it has the same freedom from reference to the physical world of action that is possessed by images , as in a ...
第 120 頁
... material of any great importance appears in the silent reading of a book or poem , it is tempting to place the literary work of art entirely within the subject , and to deny that there is any rele- vant physical contribution whatever ...
... material of any great importance appears in the silent reading of a book or poem , it is tempting to place the literary work of art entirely within the subject , and to deny that there is any rele- vant physical contribution whatever ...
第 220 頁
... material character , any translation of these is in some degree a distortion . Leonardo's " Last Supper , " faded and mutilated by restoration even within the painter's own lifetime , lives for most more as an idea than as a material ...
... material character , any translation of these is in some degree a distortion . Leonardo's " Last Supper , " faded and mutilated by restoration even within the painter's own lifetime , lives for most more as an idea than as a material ...
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
A. E. Housman aesthetic experience aesthetic judgment aesthetic terms aestheticians ambiguity analogy analysis answer appreciation architecture Aristotelian Society artist aspect beauty belief Cassie catachresis character characteristic Charlotte Brontë Clive Bell color concepts consider contemplating creative criteria criticism definition Distance distinction elements emotion Epic poetry evaluation example expression fact false feeling fiction function give hexapod human I. A. Richards idea imagination imitation imply intellect interpretation intuition Jane Austen kind knowledge language linguistic literary literature logical look matter meaning ment metaphor mind moral Morris Weitz nature novel observe painter painting perception person philosophers picture play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry problem propositions qualities question R. G. Collingwood reader reason relation relevant sculpture sensation sense sentence sort speak statement suggest suppose symbol T. S. Eliot theory things tion true truth visual words writing