| Friedrich Ueberweg - 1876 - 604 หน้า
...sensation (agreeable art) or as pleasure in the beautiful and implying judgment (fine art). \\"Ы!? the product of fine art must appear as a work of human...of numerous problems by a single principle. Reason reeogub .-> the figure as adequate to the generation of various intended forms. Experience conduct«... | |
| Immanuel Kant - 1892 - 492 หน้า
...1t 1s Art andnot JN ature ; but yet the purpos1veness in its form must seem to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature. On this feeling of freedom in the play of our cognitive faculties, which must at the same time be purposive,... | |
| Albert Hofstadter, Richard Kuhns - 2009 - 730 หน้า
...that it is art and not nature; but yet the purposiveness in its form must seem to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature. On this feeling of freedom in the play of our cognitive faculties, which must at the same time be purposive,... | |
| Mihai Spariosu - 1989 - 342 หน้า
...from all constraint, and thus to change it from work into mere play. (§43) to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature. On this feeling of freedom in the play of our cognitive faculties, which must at the same time be purposive,... | |
| John H. Zammito - 1992 - 490 หน้า
...Kant writes that art must look like nature, what he means is that it should appear "as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature [von allem Zwange willkiirlicher Regeln sofrei scheinen, als ob es ein Product der blofien Natur set]."29... | |
| Paul Guyer - 1993 - 476 หน้า
...art "is art and not nature, nevertheless the purposiveness of its form must appear as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature," because the pleasure in a work of art, like that in a beautiful object of nature, must rest "upon this... | |
| Salim Kemal, Ivan Gaskell - 1993 - 296 หน้า
...immediately reveal itself. In Kant's terms, "the purposiveness in its form must seem to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature."7 Here the distinction between natural and artistic beauty is not in terms of an object's perceptible... | |
| Rudolf A. Makkreel - 1990 - 201 หน้า
...for Kant continues by writing: "Yet the purposiveness in its form must seem to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature" (Q, §45, 149). Both in the case of natural and artificial beauty, the purposiveness felt refers to... | |
| Herman Parret - 1998 - 844 หน้า
...must be recognized to be art and not nature. Nevertheless the finality in its form must appear just as free from the constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature. Upon this feeling of freedom in the play of our cognitive faculties — which play has at the same... | |
| Jonathan M. Hess - 1999 - 284 หน้า
...that it is art and not nature; but yet the purposiveness in its form must seem to be as free from all constraint of arbitrary rules as if it were a product of mere nature. . . . Nature was beautiful because it looked like art, and art can only be called beautiful if we are... | |
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