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 30
... imitation in art , opposing to this idea a theory of selective re - creation by the imagination in accordance with ... imitation ; for imitation can only create as its handiwork what it has seen , but imagination equally what it has not ...
... imitation in art , opposing to this idea a theory of selective re - creation by the imagination in accordance with ... imitation ; for imitation can only create as its handiwork what it has seen , but imagination equally what it has not ...
Side 35
... imitation . The Aristotelian conception of an imitation more universal than can be found in an individual , of life as it ought to be rather than as it is , which led him to think of a painter as making a " likeness which is true to ...
... imitation . The Aristotelian conception of an imitation more universal than can be found in an individual , of life as it ought to be rather than as it is , which led him to think of a painter as making a " likeness which is true to ...
Side 216
... imitation of it , either in Poetry or Painting , must of necessity produce a much greater : for both these arts , as I said before , are not only true imitations of Nature , but of the best Nature , of that which is wrought up to a ...
... imitation of it , either in Poetry or Painting , must of necessity produce a much greater : for both these arts , as I said before , are not only true imitations of Nature , but of the best Nature , of that which is wrought up to a ...
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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