The Quarterly Review, Volume 246William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Sir William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero Baron Ernle John Murray, 1926 |
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Page 14
... human nature . Humanism , as I understand it , means the open tolerant mind , unfettered by dogmatic authority , that finds its interest in all the finer realisations of man . The true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school ...
... human nature . Humanism , as I understand it , means the open tolerant mind , unfettered by dogmatic authority , that finds its interest in all the finer realisations of man . The true Humanist does not limit his outlook to one school ...
Page 15
... human movement or human moods . ' We transcribe architecture into terms of ourselves . ' This , he says , is the basis of creative design and of critical appreciation , and it amounts to this , that our æsthetic enjoyment of ...
... human movement or human moods . ' We transcribe architecture into terms of ourselves . ' This , he says , is the basis of creative design and of critical appreciation , and it amounts to this , that our æsthetic enjoyment of ...
Page 16
... human figure . This was the intention of Albert Durer's treatise on the symmetry of the human figure . Mr Scott's or Signor Croce's theory of æsthetic seems to me meaningless for any practical purpose ; moreover , it leaves wholly ...
... human figure . This was the intention of Albert Durer's treatise on the symmetry of the human figure . Mr Scott's or Signor Croce's theory of æsthetic seems to me meaningless for any practical purpose ; moreover , it leaves wholly ...
Page 28
... human society is more than a herd of mammals , we give prominence at the outset to the warning that the bio- logical outlook is necessarily partial , and requires to be supplemented and corrected by psychological and socio- logical ...
... human society is more than a herd of mammals , we give prominence at the outset to the warning that the bio- logical outlook is necessarily partial , and requires to be supplemented and corrected by psychological and socio- logical ...
Page 29
... human terms , Folk , Work , Place . The hope is that some practical progress may reward clearer under- standing . In looking towards the future we are grateful for what has been achieved in the past . It is a notable fact that the ...
... human terms , Folk , Work , Place . The hope is that some practical progress may reward clearer under- standing . In looking towards the future we are grateful for what has been achieved in the past . It is a notable fact that the ...
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18th century agricultural appear architect architecture Baroque Baroque architecture Baroque art beautiful Bela Kun believed better British Brutus building called capital cent century Church criticism Dante dead dividend doubt employees England English existence fact farm favour France friends Gatchina ghost Giotto give Government Grand Duke hand human Hungarian Hungary idea improved increase industry Inigo Jones interest Irish jest-book jests John Rastell labour land landlord landowner less Liberal living look Lord matter ment methods Michael Romanov mind Minister modern necromancy never Newman Oxford Pausanias perhaps Philip Webb Plutarch poetry poets political practice probably produced profits prohibition Rastell realise reason recognised regard seems share Sitwell social spirit St Petersburg stories success suggested taxation tenant things thought tion to-day told W. G. Ward whole workers writes