The Aesthetic Theory of Thomas Hobbes: With Special Reference to His Contribution to the Psychological Approach in English Literary CriticismUniversity of Michigan Press, 1940 - 339 sider |
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Side 70
... poetry treat nothing more than imaginary history . " 148 The justest division of poetry , except what it shares in common with history ( which has its feigned chronicles , feigned lives , and feigned re- lations ) , is , 1. Into ...
... poetry treat nothing more than imaginary history . " 148 The justest division of poetry , except what it shares in common with history ( which has its feigned chronicles , feigned lives , and feigned re- lations ) , is , 1. Into ...
Side 71
... poetry corrects it , and presents us with the fates and fortunes of persons rewarded or punished according to merit . And as real history disgusts us with a familiar and constant similitude of things , poetry relieves us by unexpected ...
... poetry corrects it , and presents us with the fates and fortunes of persons rewarded or punished according to merit . And as real history disgusts us with a familiar and constant similitude of things , poetry relieves us by unexpected ...
Side 228
... poetic emotion . Words- worth was later to express in its most memorable form the relation of poetry to meditation . Dennis is by no means an- ticipating the dictum that " poetry is emotion recollected in tranquility " ; indeed , his ...
... poetic emotion . Words- worth was later to express in its most memorable form the relation of poetry to meditation . Dennis is by no means an- ticipating the dictum that " poetry is emotion recollected in tranquility " ; indeed , his ...
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CHAPTER PAGE | 3 |
SOME OF HOBBESS PREDECESSORS IN THE PSYCHO | 25 |
HOBBESS THEORY OF IMAGINATION | 79 |
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Abraham Cowley Addison admiration Advancement and Reformation aesthetic Answer to Davenant appears appetite Aquinas Aristotle Bacon beautiful called causes Charleton Cicero conception Cowley definition delight Dennis 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 gives Gondibert Gracián Grounds of Criticism hath Heroic Poem History Hobbes Hobbes's Hobbes's theory Hobbian Huarte I. A. Richards Ibid ideal ideas images imagination imitation invention John Dryden knowledge later Leviathan London Longinus memory ment method mind motion nature neoclassic novelty object observation orator passage passions perception phantasms pleasure Plotinus Poesy poet poetic poetry Preface present principle psychological Quintilian rational reader reason Reformation of Modern remarks sense similitudes soul spirit sublime taste things Thomas Aquinas Thomas Hobbes thought Thucydides tion tragedy true truth viii words writes