| Grant Allen - Aesthetics - 1877 - 310 pages
...receptive side, in the former on the re-active. So that ^Esthetic Pleasure may be provisionally defined as the subjective concomitant of the normal amount...peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spinal nervous system. What ^Esthetic Pain (or rather disagreeable ./Esthetic Feeling) may be we shall see hereafter. For... | |
| sir John Bowring - 1877 - 594 pages
...receptive side, in the former on the reactive. So that aesthetic pleasure may be provisionally defined aa the subjective concomitant of the normal amount of...end-organs of the cerebro-spinal nervous system." This we leave to the initiated. A second passage puts the matter somewhat more clearly — " The aesthetically... | |
| Grant Allen - Aesthetics - 1877 - 306 pages
...side, in the former on the re-active. •* \ So that .(Esthetic Pleasure may be provisionally denned as the subjective concomitant of the normal amount...life-serving function, in the peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spiual .nervous system. What JSsthetic Pain (or rather disagreeable ./Esthetic Feeling) may... | |
| G. L. - Aesthetics - 1879 - 280 pages
...expression. An English writer of the Eugene Yeron school tells us that it "may be provisionally defined as the subjective concomitant of the normal amount of activity not directly connected with the life-preserving function in the peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spinal nervous system." l... | |
| George Trumbull Ladd - Mind and body - 1887 - 728 pages
...nerves, to an extent not exceeding the ordinary powers of reparation possessed by the system." JEsthetic pleasure he provisionally defines as "the subjective...life-serving function, in the peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spiual nervous system." ' Now, that pleasure is the reflex of healthy and unimpeded activity... | |
| George Trumbull Ladd - Philosophy - 1891 - 474 pages
...Grant Allen has hit the mark with the high-sounding declaration that all aesthetical pleasure is " the subjective concomitant of the normal amount of...life-serving function, in the peripheral end-organs of the cerebro- spinal nervous system." With all this admitted, it is hard to see wherein the problem of philosophical... | |
| Sir George Grove, David Masson, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1892 - 524 pages
...piece of music, they are only exercising the iesthetic impulse, and that the aesthetic impulse is only "the subjective concomitant of the normal amount of...peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spinal nervous system 1 " Is this the Philosophy that Milton found divine and charming and musical as Apollo's lute ? Can... | |
| Charles Mills Gayley, Fred Newton Scott - Aesthetics - 1899 - 612 pages
...the gratification they afford. He thus arrives at the following definition : Aesthetic pleasure is " the subjective concomitant of the normal amount of activity, not directly connected with the life-serving function, in the peripheral end-organs of the cerebro-spinal nervous system." Aesthetic... | |
| George Trumbull Ladd, Robert Sessions Woodworth - Mind and body - 1911 - 732 pages
...afferent cerebro-spinal nerves, to an extent not exceeding the ordinary powers of reparation possessed by the system." ^Esthetic pleasure he provisionally defines...nerves of the cerebro-spinal system for sensations, pleasurable or painful, of muscular, organic, or more special sort, scarcely needs statement as a newly... | |
| George Trumbull Ladd, Robert Sessions Woodworth - Psychophysiology - 1915 - 742 pages
...afferent cerebro-spinal nerves, to an extent not exceeding the ordinary powers of reparation possessed by the system." ^Esthetic pleasure he provisionally defines...nerves of the cerebro-spinal system for sensations, pleasurable or painful, of muscular, organic, or more special sort, scarcely needs statement as a newly... | |
| |