A History of Philosophy |
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Page 256
... esthetic pleasure to all men in all times and places . That some people do not get esthetic satisfaction from an object we feel to be beautiful is , we say , a reflec- tion , not upon its beauty , but upon their sensitiveness . " Free ...
... esthetic pleasure to all men in all times and places . That some people do not get esthetic satisfaction from an object we feel to be beautiful is , we say , a reflec- tion , not upon its beauty , but upon their sensitiveness . " Free ...
Page 257
... esthetic judgments with non- esthetic conditions . " An Ideal of beautiful flowers , of a beautiful piece of furniture , of a beautiful view , " or , in other words , of free beauty , " is inconceivable . " No less so is an ideal " of a ...
... esthetic judgments with non- esthetic conditions . " An Ideal of beautiful flowers , of a beautiful piece of furniture , of a beautiful view , " or , in other words , of free beauty , " is inconceivable . " No less so is an ideal " of a ...
Page 259
... esthetic taste creates it by imputing to each one of us the common subjective thrill and satisfaction felt by all of us in their presence . As a matter of fact , esthetic satisfaction is rarely experienced in a pure state . Ordinarily ...
... esthetic taste creates it by imputing to each one of us the common subjective thrill and satisfaction felt by all of us in their presence . As a matter of fact , esthetic satisfaction is rarely experienced in a pure state . Ordinarily ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE RELIGIOUS AND ETHICAL BACKGROUND OF GREEK PHILOSOPHY | 17 |
THE MILESIAN SCHOOL | 26 |
Copyright | |
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absolute activity actual Anaxagoras Anaximander Aristotle beauty become behavior believe body Burnet Carneades causation cause character Christian conceived concept consciousness created Cyrenaics Democritus Descartes divine doctrine earth Eleatic Empedocles Epicureans Epicurus essence esthetic ethics evil existence experience expression external world feeling Fichte final finite freedom Greek happiness Hegel Hence Heraclitus human ideal ideas immortality individual infinite intellect intelligible Kant knowledge Leucippus living logical mathematical matter means metaphysical mind Monads moral motion movement nature Neo-Platonic objects organic pantheism Parmenides particular perceive perceptions phenomena philosophy physical Plato pleasure Plotinus political possible principle pure qualities rational Reality reason regarded relations religion religious Roscellinus scientific sensation sense sensible world skepticism social Socrates soul space Spinoza spirit Stoic Stoicism substance teaching theology theory things things-in-themselves thinking thought tion true truth universe Unmoved Mover virtue whole world-process world-stuff