The Art of Life
London, Selwyn & Blount (1937)
| Abstract | Philosophy is an art.--On right designation.--On the art of oratory.--The mystery of polarisation.--On concentration.--On polyphony.--Utopians and prophets.--Fruitful disorder.--The conflict between youth and age.--The individual and the spirit of the age.--The limited number of important cultural forms.--The significance of Chinese art.--Death and re-birth.--On the future of the Mediterranean civilisations.--Life is and art.--The culture of beauth. | |||||||||
| Keywords | No keywords specified (fix it) | |||||||||
| Categories | No categories specified (fix it) | |||||||||
| Call number | B3279.K43.S923 | |||||||||
| ISBN(s) | ||||||||||
| Options |
|
|||||||||
| PhilPapers Archive |
Upload a copy of this paper Check publisher's policy on self-archival Papers currently archived: 5,875 |
| External links | This entry has no external links. Add one. |
| Through your library | Configure |
Dominic McIver Lopes (2007). Art Without ‘Art’. British Journal of Aesthetics 47 (1):1-15.
Colin Heydt (2010). Mill, Life as Art, and Problems of Self-Description in an Industrial Age. In Ben Eggleston, Dale E. Miller & D. Weinstein (eds.), John Stuart Mill and the Art of Life. Oxford University Press.
Donald Kuspit (1995). Art and Capital: An Ironic Dialectic. Critical Review 9 (4):465-482.
Clementina Red (2012). Specular Phenomenology: Art and Art Criticism. Collingwood and British Idealism Studies 17 (2):248-260.
Matthew Kieran (2005). Revealing Art. Routledge.
Victor Yelverton Haines (2004). Recursive Chaos in Defining Art Recursively. British Journal of Aesthetics 44 (1):73-83.
Monthly downloads
Sorry, there are not enough data points to plot this chart.
|
Added to index2010-05-13Total downloads0Recent downloads (6 months)0How can I increase my downloads? |

