Sociality: The Art of Living TogetherHolborn Publishing House, 1927 - 302 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 85
Stran xviii
... social science is bound up with our lack of social sense , and this again with dullness of feeling . For the social life is one primarily expressive of feeling , as we easily see when we contrast ourselves with our neighbours the French ...
... social science is bound up with our lack of social sense , and this again with dullness of feeling . For the social life is one primarily expressive of feeling , as we easily see when we contrast ourselves with our neighbours the French ...
Stran xix
... social with the moral.1 Now whether these two are ultimately identical or not , they are not so immediately . The social directly expresses the life of feeling , not of the will , though doubtless there is much common to the two . Yet ...
... social with the moral.1 Now whether these two are ultimately identical or not , they are not so immediately . The social directly expresses the life of feeling , not of the will , though doubtless there is much common to the two . Yet ...
Stran 60
... social life , and again to art as the great socializer , are what concern us here . It is plain that play is not simply identical with either social life or art , and yet it has close affinities with both . Social living evidently ...
... social life , and again to art as the great socializer , are what concern us here . It is plain that play is not simply identical with either social life or art , and yet it has close affinities with both . Social living evidently ...
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