The Aesthetic Theory of Thomas HobbesUniversity of Michigan Press, 1940 - 339 sider |
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Side 153
... reader see and feel . Actions and persons are so placed before the reader that he sees them as with his own eyes and responds emotionally to their significance . On this point Hobbes quotes Plutarch with full acceptance of his views ...
... reader see and feel . Actions and persons are so placed before the reader that he sees them as with his own eyes and responds emotionally to their significance . On this point Hobbes quotes Plutarch with full acceptance of his views ...
Side 155
... reader see them as before his own eyes . Altogether , Hobbes finds that Thucydides writes in a style of unusual perfection ; that he writes with judgment , both in his larger designs and in the selection and expression of details ; that ...
... reader see them as before his own eyes . Altogether , Hobbes finds that Thucydides writes in a style of unusual perfection ; that he writes with judgment , both in his larger designs and in the selection and expression of details ; that ...
Side 159
... readers into a sense of witnessing actual life . The reader of an epic knows well enough that he is dealing with feigned actions , not history , and will consequently accept a certain overstepping of actuality . There is a limit ...
... readers into a sense of witnessing actual life . The reader of an epic knows well enough that he is dealing with feigned actions , not history , and will consequently accept a certain overstepping of actuality . There is a limit ...
Innhold
PREFACE | 3 |
SOME OF HOBBESS PREDECESSORS IN THE PSYCHO | 25 |
HOBBESS THEORY OF IMAGINATION | 79 |
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Abraham Cowley activity Addison admiration Advancement and Reformation aesthetic Answer to Davenant appetite Aquinas Aristotle Bacon beauty called causes Charleton Cicero conception Cowley definition delight Dennis Dennis's Descartes desire discourse Dryden effects Elements of Law Elements of Philosophy emotional emphasis empiricism English Ernest Rhys Essays experience expression faculty fancy and judgment Ferdinand Tönnies genius give Gondibert Gracián Grounds of Criticism hath Heroic Poem History Hobbes Hobbes's Hobbes's theory Hobbian Huarte I. A. Richards Ibid ideas images imagination invention John Dryden knowledge later Leviathan London Longinus materials memory ment method mind motion nature neoclassic novelty object observation passage passions perception phantasms pleasure Plotinus Poesy poet poetic Preface present principle psychological Quintilian rational reader reason Reformation of Modern remarks Rhetoric sense similitudes soul Spingarn spirit things Thomas Aquinas Thomas Hobbes thought Thucydides tion tragedy true truth viii virtue words writes