The Architecture of Humanism: A Study in the History of TasteConstable Limited, 1924 - 265 Seiten |
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Seite 66
... Nature . For , obviously , those qualities which romanticism seeks , these Nature possesses in the highest degree . Nature is strange , fantastic , unexpected , terrible . Like the past , Nature is remote . Indifferent to human ...
... Nature . For , obviously , those qualities which romanticism seeks , these Nature possesses in the highest degree . Nature is strange , fantastic , unexpected , terrible . Like the past , Nature is remote . Indifferent to human ...
Seite 77
... Nature ' became a creed . But to live according to Nature means also , inci- dentally , to build and to garden according to Nature . And since the sublimity of Nature - its claim to worship - lay in its aloof indifference to man and in ...
... Nature ' became a creed . But to live according to Nature means also , inci- dentally , to build and to garden according to Nature . And since the sublimity of Nature - its claim to worship - lay in its aloof indifference to man and in ...
Seite 78
... Nature . ' The cult of Nature has a venerable history ; but it is interesting to notice the change it has here under- gone . For Nature , as the romantic critics conceive it , is something very different from the Nature which their ...
... Nature . ' The cult of Nature has a venerable history ; but it is interesting to notice the change it has here under- gone . For Nature , as the romantic critics conceive it , is something very different from the Nature which their ...
Inhalt
THE ROMANTIC FALLACY | 37 |
THE MECHANICAL FALLACY | 94 |
THE BIOLOGICAL FALLACY | 165 |
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The Architecture of Humanism: A Study in the History of Taste Geoffrey Scott Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1999 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
academic achieved aesthetic æsthetic value antiquity appear archæology archi architectural art argument artistic baroque architects beauty Bramante Brunelleschi builders building century CHAPTER classic architecture coherence confusion conscious construction Corinthian Orders criticism of architecture cult decorative delight distinction dome effect elements Empire style ethical criticism experience expression fact false forms function give Gothic Gothic revival Greek human humanist ideal ideas imagination imitation influence insistent instinct intellectual Italian Italian architecture Italy laws less literary logic mass material means mechanical mediæval mind modern moral Nature painting Palladio past period physical picturesque pleasure poetic poetry practical prejudice principle proportion qualities quattrocento realised recognise relation Renais Renaissance architecture Renaissance humanism Renaissance style Roman architecture Romantic Fallacy Romantic Movement Romanticism Rome Ruskin sance satisfy scientific sculpture sense sequence space spirit Stones of Venice structure suggested taste tecture theory of architecture things thought tion tradition true Vitruvius