... be noted, its relations would be observed, its recurrence might even be expected ; but all this would happen without a shadow of desire, of pleasure, or of regret. No event would be repulsive, no situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world... The Sense of Beauty - 19. lappuseautors: George Santayana - 2004 - 288 lapasIerobežota priekšskatīšana - Par šo grāmatu
| George Santayana - 1920 - 358 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...Observation will not do, appreciation is required. We may therefore at once assert this axiom, important for all moral philosophy and fatal to certain... | |
| Ralph Barton Perry - 1926 - 766 lapas
...mirrored without any emotion. . . . No event would be repulsive, no situation terrible. ... In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether, all value and excellence would be gone. . . . Values spring from the immediate and inexplicable reaction of vital impulse, and from the irrational... | |
| 1927 - 506 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...emotional consciousness that is needed. Observation alone will not do, appreciation is required."* This is crystal clear and indisputable, and the consequences... | |
| Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.) - 1927 - 496 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...emotional consciousness that is needed. Observation alone will not do, appreciation is required."8 This is crystal clear and indisputable, and the consequences... | |
| 1927 - 506 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...emotional consciousness that is needed. Observation alone will not do, appreciation is required."3 This is crystal clear and indisputable, and the consequences... | |
| Herman Parret - 1994 - 408 lapas
...triviality consists in abstraction from human interests [...] (Santayana 1896 [1986]:5) As he says, "for the existence of good in any form it is not merely...consciousness but emotional consciousness that is needed" (Ibidem, 16). In any case, both aesthetic and moral judgments are judgments of value for Santayana;... | |
| Alwyn Scott - 1999 - 282 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...Observation will not do, appreciation is required. Consciousness, according to Santayana, is useful not only for the survival of a species but also for... | |
| George Santayana - 2002 - 302 lapas
...situation terrible. We might, in a word, have a world of idea without a world of will. In this case, as completely as if consciousness were absent altogether,...appreciation is required. § 2. We may therefore at once assert axiom, important for all moral philosophy and fatal to certain stubborn incoherences of... | |
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