An Abridgment of Elements of Criticism |
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Strona iii
Association of Ideas ... 2. Emotions and passions .... Part 1. Causes unfolded of the Emotions and Passions : Sect . 1. Difference between Emotion and Passion.Causes that are the most common and the most general .
Association of Ideas ... 2. Emotions and passions .... Part 1. Causes unfolded of the Emotions and Passions : Sect . 1. Difference between Emotion and Passion.Causes that are the most common and the most general .
Strona x
CHAPTER I. Association of Ideas . To whom are the fine arts a favorite entertainment ? What habit is acquired by philosophic inquiry into the principles of the fine arts ? llow may the science of criticism be considered ?
CHAPTER I. Association of Ideas . To whom are the fine arts a favorite entertainment ? What habit is acquired by philosophic inquiry into the principles of the fine arts ? llow may the science of criticism be considered ?
Strona 11
CHAPTER I. Association of Ideas . WHILE awake we are conscious of a continued train of perceptions passing in our minds . It requires 110 activity to carry on , nor can we at will add an idea to this train , which is not regulated by ...
CHAPTER I. Association of Ideas . WHILE awake we are conscious of a continued train of perceptions passing in our minds . It requires 110 activity to carry on , nor can we at will add an idea to this train , which is not regulated by ...
Strona 12
I ascribe this to a bluntness in the discerning faculty ; and such a person has usually a great flow of ideas , because they are introduced by any relations indifferently . This doctrine is in a lively manner illustrated by Shakspeare ...
I ascribe this to a bluntness in the discerning faculty ; and such a person has usually a great flow of ideas , because they are introduced by any relations indifferently . This doctrine is in a lively manner illustrated by Shakspeare ...
Strona 13
On the other hand , a man of an accurate judgment cannot have a flow of ideas ; because the slighter relations , making no figure in his mind , have no power to introduce ideas ; thence an accurate judgment is not friendly to eloquence ...
On the other hand , a man of an accurate judgment cannot have a flow of ideas ; because the slighter relations , making no figure in his mind , have no power to introduce ideas ; thence an accurate judgment is not friendly to eloquence ...
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