| Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1897 - 166 páginas
...individuality in accordance with the one inward principle. — History of Philosophy, vol. ii. p. 48 (ip 393). Art liberates the real import of appearances from...the higher reality and the more genuine existence, as compared with the realities of common life. — Philosophy of Fine Art, p. 12 (p. 15). By reason... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - 1904 - 314 páginas
...nature with its finite actuality, and the infinite freedom of the reason that comprehends."* . . . "Art liberates the real import of appearances from...phenomenal semblances a higher reality born of mind." f The work of art is what it is for sensuous apprehension. But it is no mere sensuous object. It addresses... | |
| Richard Burdon Haldane Haldane (Viscount) - 1904 - 318 páginas
...nature with its finite actuality, and the infinite freedom of the reason that comprehends."* . . . "Art liberates the real import of appearances from...phenomenal semblances a higher reality born of mind." t The work of art is what it is for sensuous apprehension. But it is no mere sensuous object. It addresses... | |
| Andrew Beaumont Robertson - 1911 - 168 páginas
...choose as its medium Art or Philosophy or Knowledge, its effect is equally, to quote Hegel,' to liberate the real import of appearances from the semblance and deception of this bad and fleeting world, and impart to phenomenal semblances a higher reality, born of mind.' " It is the winged, invisible messenger... | |
| Clarence De Witt Thorpe - 1926 - 240 páginas
...retaining its essential and self-centered being, and thus and no otherwise attaining genuine reality. . . . Art liberates the real import of appearances from...existence in comparison with the realities of common life. With Keats the essential reality of these imaginative conceptions was not at all dependent on their... | |
| Clarence De Witt Thorpe - 1926 - 234 páginas
...retaining its essential and self-centered being, and thus and no otherwise attaining genuine reality. . . . Art liberates the real import of appearances from...existence in comparison with the realities of common life. With Keats the essential reality of these imaginative conceptions was not at all dependent on their... | |
| Clarence De Witt Thorpe - 1926 - 238 páginas
...retaining its essential and self-centered being, and thus and no otherwise attaining genuine reality. . . . Art liberates the real import of appearances from the semblance and deception of this ba<i and fleeting world, and imparts to phenomenal semblances a higher reality, born of mind. The appearances... | |
| 1949 - 816 páginas
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