Sociality: The Art of Living TogetherHolborn Publishing House, 1927 - 302 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 48
Stran 27
... imagination cannot err , it being defined as seeing to the heart , and that if anything be wrong it is not the imagination's fault , but some inferior faculty's , which would have its foolish say in the matter and meddled with the ...
... imagination cannot err , it being defined as seeing to the heart , and that if anything be wrong it is not the imagination's fault , but some inferior faculty's , which would have its foolish say in the matter and meddled with the ...
Stran 129
... imagination . This , as we constantly say , can only be done by sympathy of the sort that is shown by an artist or ... imagination . Even where our view of another person's character is adverse and our reconstruction unflattering , the ...
... imagination . This , as we constantly say , can only be done by sympathy of the sort that is shown by an artist or ... imagination . Even where our view of another person's character is adverse and our reconstruction unflattering , the ...
Stran 131
... imagination may always be tested by accompanying tenderness of emotion . • . . And , on the other hand , I suppose the chief bar to the action of imagination , and so to all greatness in this present age of ours , is its mean and ...
... imagination may always be tested by accompanying tenderness of emotion . • . . And , on the other hand , I suppose the chief bar to the action of imagination , and so to all greatness in this present age of ours , is its mean and ...
Vsebina
ÆSTHETICAL | 3 |
definitionDiscovery and Creation | 24 |
EMOTIONAL REACTIONS | 36 |
18 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
19th century action activity Adam Smith admiration aesthetic æsthetic idealization agnosticism amongst analogy animals artist attained attitude beauty become belief called character Christ church civilization contemplation creative Critique of Judgment culture desire divine doubtless earthly emotional empathy ethics experience expression expressionism feeling fellowship group-life harmony Hegel Hence Herbart highest human nature idea imagination imitation impressionism impulse imputations individual involves John Ruskin justice Kant Kingdom Kingdom of God living means merely method mind mode modern monads moral mutual numbers object organic passions perfection perhaps person philosophy Plato play pleasure poetic justice political possible primarily principle produce Protestantism Psychology reality reason regarded religion religious result Ruskin seems sense social society spiritual symbolism sympathetic sympathy taste tendency tends things true unity universal Utopia values VERNON LEE whilst whole Wildon Carr