The Sense of BeautyTransaction Publishers, 2002年1月1日 - 275 頁 From antiquity to the present, many have written on the subject of beauty, but precious few have done so with the capacity themselves to write beautifully. "The Sense of Beauty is "that rare exception. This remarkable early work of the great American philosopher, George Santayana, features a quality of prose that is as wondrous as what he had to say. Indeed, his summation remains a flawless classical statement. "Beauty seems to be the clearest manifestation of perfection, and the best evidence of its possibility. If perfection is, as it should be, the ultimate justification of being, we may understand the ground of the moral dignity of beauty. Be'auty is a pledge of the possible conformity between the soul and nature, and consequently a ground of faith in the supremacy of the good." The editor of this new edition, John McGormick, reminds us that "The Sense of Beauty is "the first work in aesthetics written in the United States. Santayana was versed in the history of his subject, from Plato and Aristotle to Schopenhauer and Taine in the nineteenth century. Santayana took as his task a complete rethinking of the idea that beauty is embedded in objects. Rather beauty is an emotion, a value, and a sense of the good. In this, aesthetics was unlike ethics: not a correction of evil or pursuit of the virtuous. Rather it is a pleasure that resides in the sense of self. The work is divided into chapters on the materials of beauty, form and expression. A good many of Santayana's later works are presaged by this early effort. And this volume also anticipates the development of art as a movement as well as a value apart from other aspects of life. The work is written without posturing, without hectoring. Santayana is nonetheless able to give expression to strong views. His preferences are made perfectly plain. Perhaps the key is a powerful belief that beauty is an adornment not a material necessity. But that does mean art is trivial. Quite the contrary, the good life is precisely the extent to which such "adornments" as painting, poetry or music come to define the lives of individuals and civilizations alike. This is, in short, a major work that can still inform and move us a century after its first composition. |
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... interest , because they appeal only to contem- plation , and yet have attracted to their service , in all civilized ages , an amount of effort , genius , and honour , little inferior to that given to indus- try , war , or religion . The ...
... interests ; only those judgments and opinions are truly insignificant which wander beyond the reach of verification , and have no func- tion in the ordering and enriching of life . Both ethics and æsthetics have suffered much from the ...
... interests and the apparent pursuit of con- ceived goods . For there would have been spon- taneous and ingrained tendencies to avoid certain contingencies and to produce others ; all the dumb show and evidence of thinking would have been ...
... interests . As our ideas are gradually brought into conformity with the facts by the painful process of selection , — for intuition runs equally into truth and into error , and can settle nothing if not controlled by expe- rience , we ...
... interests of man against the authority of general principles which have ceased to represent those interests fairly , but which still obtain the idolatrous THE NATURE OF BEAUTY 31 IX.
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XL | 146 |
XLI | 152 |
XLII | 155 |
XLIII | 157 |
XLIV | 160 |
XLV | 163 |
XLVI | 167 |
XLVII | 171 |
40 | |
XIII | 44 |
XIV | 49 |
XV | 53 |
XVI | 56 |
XVII | 62 |
XVIII | 65 |
XX | 68 |
XXI | 72 |
XXII | 76 |
XXIII | 82 |
XXIV | 85 |
XXV | 88 |
XXVI | 91 |
XXVII | 95 |
XXVIII | 97 |
XXIX | 100 |
XXX | 106 |
XXXI | 110 |
XXXII | 112 |
XXXIII | 116 |
XXXIV | 121 |
XXXV | 126 |
XXXVI | 131 |
XXXVII | 133 |
XXXVIII | 138 |
XXXIX | 142 |
XLVIII | 174 |
XLIX | 176 |
L | 180 |
LI | 185 |
LII | 192 |
LIII | 198 |
LIV | 201 |
LV | 205 |
LVI | 208 |
LVII | 211 |
LVIII | 214 |
LIX | 218 |
LX | 221 |
LXI | 226 |
LXII | 228 |
LXIII | 233 |
LXIV | 239 |
LXV | 245 |
LXVI | 250 |
LXVII | 253 |
LXVIII | 256 |
LXIX | 258 |
LXX | 263 |
LXXI | 266 |
LXXII | 271 |