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 152
... delight if it is to succeed , but delight must not be purchased at the expense of truth . In an earlier para- graph he had written : " For in truth consisteth the soul , and in elocution the body of history . The latter without the ...
... delight if it is to succeed , but delight must not be purchased at the expense of truth . In an earlier para- graph he had written : " For in truth consisteth the soul , and in elocution the body of history . The latter without the ...
Side 204
... delight and instruct . But before it can either give delight or instruct effectively , it must arouse the passions and warm and elevate the imagination ; for , important as poetry may be as a 31 A Defence of an Essay of Dramatic Poesy ...
... delight and instruct . But before it can either give delight or instruct effectively , it must arouse the passions and warm and elevate the imagination ; for , important as poetry may be as a 31 A Defence of an Essay of Dramatic Poesy ...
Side 245
... delight is appetite , and appetite presupposeth a farther end , there can be no contentment but in proceeding " ; 69 that " Because curi- osity is delight , therefore all novelty is so " ; 70 that the " hope and expectation of future ...
... delight is appetite , and appetite presupposeth a farther end , there can be no contentment but in proceeding " ; 69 that " Because curi- osity is delight , therefore all novelty is so " ; 70 that the " hope and expectation of future ...
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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 appetite Aquinas Aristotle Bacon beauty 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 experience expression faculty fancy and judgment Ferdinand Tönnies genius give Gondibert Gracián Grounds of Criticism hath Henry Herringman Heroic Poem History Hobbes's Hobbes's theory Hobbian Huarte I. A. Richards Ibid ideas images imagination invention J. E. Spingarn John Dryden knowledge Leviathan literary London Longinus memory ment method mind motion nature neoclassic novelty object observation Oxford passage passions perception phantasms pleasure Plotinus Poesy poet poetic Preface present principle psychological Quintilian reader reason Reformation of Modern remarks Rhetoric sense similitudes soul spirit things Thomas Aquinas Thomas Hobbes thought Thucydides tion tragedy translated true truth viii words writes