The Physiology of Beauty |
Contents
THE PUBLIC AND THE PRIVATE | 29 |
THE MATTER OF MORALS | 65 |
PUBLICITY AND THE SELF | 79 |
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accident of tuition aesthetic situations analysis artist biological utility blank verse Cleopatra Clive Bell coherence communicable communication complex concept conditioned reflex conditioned stimulus criticism declare desire to desire determined differentiation distinction ditioned dog's emotion enjoy enquiry established ethical judgment evil evoke examination experiment external inhibition extinguished fact G. E. Moore happenings holistic human hypothesis I. A. Richards idealist inhibited by extinction intrinsic value investigatory reflexes LANCELOT HOGBEN language large number meat powder ment Moore moral judgments nature notion observed ourselves particular situation Pavlov Pavlov's dogs perhaps philosophers play pleasure poem poetry predictions presented Principia Ethica Professor Paton public world publicly discriminated re-inforced reality reason reception receptor organs reciprocal dis-inhibition reference relation Roger Fry Romanticism seems Shakespeare simple and indefinable Smuts sort speak stimuli structures and behaviours suggest surely theatre things tion unconditioned unity verse whole word yellow