The Aesthetic Theory of Thomas Hobbes: With Special Reference to His Contribution to the Psychological Approach in English Literary Criticism |
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Spingarn , moreover , sees Hobbes as important chiefly in relation to later seventeenth - century criticism , rather than to the long and somewhat devious development of the psychological approach that culminated in Coleridge and ...
Spingarn , moreover , sees Hobbes as important chiefly in relation to later seventeenth - century criticism , rather than to the long and somewhat devious development of the psychological approach that culminated in Coleridge and ...
Side 98
Hobbes's statement about judgment leaves doubt as to whether this faculty has any relation to literary ends ; we must look elsewhere for evidence on this point . Fancy , however , definitely appears to have such a relation - in the ...
Hobbes's statement about judgment leaves doubt as to whether this faculty has any relation to literary ends ; we must look elsewhere for evidence on this point . Fancy , however , definitely appears to have such a relation - in the ...
Side 103
With relation to these phantasms , moreover , since there is no memory , there can be neither “ fancy " nor " judgment ” in the sense of taking notice of likenesses and differences : “ To conclude , when we dream , we do not wonder at ...
With relation to these phantasms , moreover , since there is no memory , there can be neither “ fancy " nor " judgment ” in the sense of taking notice of likenesses and differences : “ To conclude , when we dream , we do not wonder at ...
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Innhold
CHAPTER PAGE | 3 |
SOME OF HOBBESS PREDECESSORS IN THE PSYCHO | 25 |
HOBBESS THEORY OF IMAGINATION | 79 |
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according actions activity acts admiration aesthetic Answer appears appetite Aristotle Bacon beauty becomes body called causes conception criticism Davenant definition delight Dennis desire Dryden effects Elements Elements of Law emotional English Essays evidence experience expression fact faculty fancy follow functions further genius give hand History Hobbes Hobbes's human Ibid ideal ideas images imagination imitation important influence interest invention judg judgment kind knowledge language later learned Leviathan London materials matter means memory method mind motion move names nature never novelty object observation original passage passions perception philosophy pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Preface present principle processes produce psychological reader reason relation remarks rules seems sense shows soul sources speak specific Spingarn spirit statement theory things thought tion true truth understanding whole writes