Results for ' Nature in art'

982 found
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  1.  14
    Nature in Art: Maritain Versus Gilson.Robert J. Mclaughlin - 1982 - Renascence 34 (4):303-312.
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  2.  28
    The transformation of nature in art.Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy - 1935 - New Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt.. Edited by Kapila Vatsyayan.
    An attempt to explain the theory behind medieval European and Asiatic art, especially art in India.
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  3. The Stubbornness of Nature in Art: A Reading of §§556, 558 and 560 of Hegel's Encyclopedia.Ioannis Trisokkas - 2021 - In Joshua Wretzel & Sebastian Stein (eds.), Hegel's Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences: A Critical Guide. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 232-250.
    Speight has recently raised the question, which he himself leaves unanswered, how naturalism relates to spirit in Hegel’s philosophy of art. ‘Naturalism’ denotes an explanation that invokes aspects of nature that are (allegedly) irreducible or resistant to thought. I call nature ‘stubborn’ insofar as it evinces resistance to its being formed by thought and hence to its being united with it. This paper argues that §§556, 558 and 560 of Hegel’s Encyclopedia answer Speight’s question by specifying three elements (...)
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  4.  19
    The Transformation of Nature in Art.W. Norman Brown & Ananda K. Coomaraswamy - 1934 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 54 (2):216.
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  5.  96
    The use of nature in art.Osborne Harold - 1962 - British Journal of Aesthetics 2 (4):318-327.
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  6. Nature and Art in the Shield of Achilles.Thomas K. Hubbard - forthcoming - Arion 2 (1).
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  7. Realizing Nature in the Self: Schelling on Art and Intellectual Intuition in the System of Transcendental Idealism.Richard L. Velkley - 1997 - In David Klemm and Zöller (ed.), Figuring the Self. SUNY Press. pp. 149--168.
     
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  8.  80
    Nature in the Light of Art.R. W. Hepburn - 1972 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 6:242-258.
    Art is without doubt a powerful agent in determining how nature appears to us. Andrew Forge describes seeing tree leaves in sunlight, and ‘thinking Pissarro’. ‘I am wrapped round by Impressionism and the leaves look like brush strokes’. To Harold Osborne, once one has been impressed by Van Gogh's painting of certain objects, ‘it is difficult ever again to see the objects uninfluenced by Van Gogh's vision of them’.
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  9.  54
    Beauty in art and in nature.J. M. Moravcsik - 1980 - Philosophical Studies 38 (4):325 - 339.
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  10. The wisdom of nature in integrating science, ethics and the arts.Anton Moser - 2000 - Science and Engineering Ethics 6 (3):365-382.
    This paper deals with an approach to the integration of science (with technology and economics), ethics (with religion and mysticism), the arts (aesthetics) and Nature, in order to establish a world-view based on holistic, evolutionary ethics that could help with problem solving. The author suggests that this integration is possible with the aid of “Nature’s wisdom” which is mirrored in the macroscopic pattern of the ecosphere. The corresponding eco-principles represent the basis for unifying soft and hard sciences resulting (...)
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  11.  9
    Nature and Art in Vergil's Second Eclogue.Eleanor Winsor Leach - 1966 - American Journal of Philology 87 (4):427.
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  12.  7
    Merleau-Ponty on the Expression of Nature in Art.Dominic Willsdon - 1998 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 29 (2):207-214.
  13.  9
    The Nature of Beauty in Art and Literature... Translation and Preface by Roger Fry.Charles Mauron & Roger Fry - 1927 - L. & Virginia Woolf.
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  14.  23
    Nature in Chinese Art.L. Carrington Goodrich & Arthur de Carle Sowerby - 1940 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 60 (4):580.
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  15. "Nature and Art in Renaissance Literature": Edward William Tayler. [REVIEW]Marcia Allentuck - 1967 - British Journal of Aesthetics 7 (2):208.
     
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  16. Problems: Beauty in Nature and Art.Gerald B. Phelan - 1935 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 11:175.
     
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  17.  26
    Nature and art: towards a 'Transhuman' aesthetics.Jim Urpeth - unknown
    At the centre of Kant’s “Critique of Aesthetic Judgment” lies a tantalising relation, the reciprocal semblance between nature and art, upon which the entire text pivots. With this thought, Kant suggests a critically licensed blurring of some of the defining presuppositions of critical philosophy and reconfigures the ancient problematic of mimesis. This paper will offer a sketch of how some of Kant’s key successors attempt to extend his project of ‘transcendental critique’ in the field of aesthetics by exposing and (...)
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  18.  5
    Nature and grace in art.John W. Dixon - 1964 - Chapel Hill,: University of North Carolina Press.
    In this carefully constructed work, Dixon extends the study of art by defining a critical procedure for determining the relation between the work of art and the fundamental attitude of the artist toward himself and the world in which he lives. His specific concern is the relation between art and Christianity. Originally published in 1964. A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that (...)
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  19.  13
    Science, Art and Nature in Medieval and Modern Thought.A. C. Crombie - 2003 - Hambledon.
    Contents Acknowledgements vii Illustrations ix Preface xi Further Bibliography of A.C. Crombie xiii 1 Designed in the Mind: Western visions of Science, Nature and Humankind 1 2 The Western Experience of Scientific Objectivity 13 3 Historical Perceptions of Medieval Science 31 4 Robert Grosseteste 39 5 Roger Bacon [with J.D. North] 51 6 Infinite Power and the Laws of Nature: A Medieval Speculation 67 7 Experimental Science and the Rational Artist in Early Modern Europe 89 8 Mathematics and (...)
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  20. Aesthetic regard for nature in environmental and land art.Emily Brady - 2007 - Ethics, Place and Environment 10 (3):287 – 300.
    Recent work in environmental ethics has seen a pragmatic turn that emphasises the importance of developing positive relationships with nature through practices involved in, for example, ecological restoration and community gardens. This article explores whether environmental and land art-making encourages positive aesthetic-moral relationships between nature and humans. It critically examines a particular type of aesthetic objection to these kinds of artworks and defends the work of Robert Smithson and Andy Goldsworthy, among others, against this charge. It is argued (...)
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  21.  16
    Nature, the artful modeler: lectures on laws, science, how nature arranges the world and how we can arrange it better.Nancy Cartwright - 2019 - Chicago: Open Court.
    How fixed are the happenings in Nature and how are they fixed? One - very orthodox - account teaches that the sciences offer general truths that we combine with local facts to derive our expectations about what will happen, either naturally or when we build a device to design, be it a laser, a washing machine, an anti-malarial bed net, or an auction for the airwavse. Nancy Cartwright offers a different picture, one in which neither we nor Nature (...)
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  22.  25
    Instabilities in Nature and Art.Malcolm E. Brown & Steve Hubbard - 2013 - Philosophy Now 94:27-29.
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  23.  24
    Symmetrical Geometry of Flowers in Art and Nature “The Triumphal Entry of Jesus into Jerusalem”.Cristian Ungureanu - 2016 - Human and Social Studies 5 (2):90-99.
    The aim of our study is to highlight the obvious similarities that exist between the organizational structures of the biological world, particularly in terms of the number and distribution of the petals on flower and the geometric configurations used by the great masters of European painting, both in the East but also in the West, in order to elaborate the compositional framework of paintings and icons. Taking into consideration the symbolic connotations concerning the field of biology, we chose as a (...)
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  24. REALISM IN ART AND REALISM OF ART / РЕАЛИЗМ В ИСКУССТВЕ И РЕАЛИЗМ ИСКУССТВА.Pavel Simashenkov - 2024 - Актуальные Вопросы Культуры, Искусства, Образования 40 (№ 2):75-82.
    The article analyzes the aesthetic content of the concept of realism in stylistic, genre and ideological aspects. Guided by the comparative method and a comprehensive approach to the study of the problem, the author declares the a priori avant-garde nature of art and, as a result, the groundlessness of confrontation between realists and avant-gardists. The catharsis achieved by the realism of expressive means should be real. Thus, the author's vision of realism presupposes not so much the harmony of art (...)
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  25. Naturalizing Aesthetics: Art and the Cognitive Neuroscience of Vision.William Seeley - 2006 - Journal of Visual Arts Practice 5 (3):195-213.
    Recent advances in out understanding of the cognitive neuroscience of perception have encouraged cognitive scientists and scientifically minded philosophers to turn their attention towards art and the problems of philosophical aesthetics. This cognitive turn does not represent an entirely novel paradigm in the study of art. Alexander Baumgarten originally introduced the term ‘aesthetics’ to refer to a science of perception. Artist’s formal methods are a means to cull the structural features necessary for constructing clear perceptual representations from the dense flux (...)
     
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  26.  92
    Illusion in Nature and Art.R. L. Gregory & E. H. Gombrich - 1975 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 34 (2):213-215.
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  27.  26
    Freedom and Nature in Schelling's Philosophy of Art.Devin Zane Shaw - 2010 - New York, NY, USA: Bloomsbury.
    Schelling is often thought to be a protean thinker whose work is difficult to approach or interpret. Devin Zane Shaw shows that the philosophy of art is the guiding thread to understanding Schelling's philosophical development from his early works in 1795-1796 through his theological turn in 1809-1810. -/- Schelling's philosophy of art is the 'keystone' of the system; it unifies his idea of freedom and his philosophy of nature. Schelling's idea of freedom is developed through a critique of the (...)
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  28.  12
    Nature in AbstractionThe World of Abstract Art.Sidney Tillim & John I. H. Baur - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 17 (2):275.
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  29.  18
    "Nature and Art in Renaissance Literature," by E. W. Tayler. [REVIEW]James Collins - 1966 - Modern Schoolman 43 (3):318-319.
  30.  24
    Mining Tacitus: secrets of empire, nature and art in the reason of state.Vera Keller - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Science 45 (2):189-212.
    A new political practice, the ‘reason of state’, informed the ends and practices of natural study in the late sixteenth century. Informed by the study of the Roman historian Tacitus, political writers gathered ‘secrets of empire’ from both history and travel. Following the economic reorientation of ‘reason of state’ by Giovanni Botero (1544–1617), such secrets came to include bodies of useful particulars concerning nature and art collected by an expanding personnel of intelligencers. A comparison between various writers describing wide-scale (...)
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  31.  49
    The New Landscape in Art and ScienceThe Anatomy of Nature.John Alford, Gyorgy Kepes & Andreas Feininger - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 17 (1):126.
  32.  2
    The rejection of the antithesis of nature and art in English political writings, 1760-1800.Henry Vining Seton Ogden - 1936 - Chicago,: Chicago University Press.
  33.  9
    Art, truth & time: essays in art.Anselma Scollard - 2019 - Edinburgh: Luath Press.
    Art, Truth, and Time is a book which endeavours to show that artistic creation depends as much upon the body, as it does the soul, and the soul's intelligent use of the body's way of understanding. When there occurs a complete disjunction between the two, as occurs in much of contemporary art, art is stripped of its inherent beauty, its wholeness. In this book the author considers the nature of art from its earliest manifestations to the present day, endeavouring (...)
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  34. An intellectual revolution: André Malraux and the temporal nature of art.Derek Allan - 2009 - Journal of European Studies 39 (2):198-224.
    Very little has been written in recent decades about the temporal nature of art. The two principal explanations provided by our Western cultural tradition are that art is timeless (`eternal') or that it belongs within the world of historical change. Neither account offers a plausible explanation of the world of art as we know it today, which contains large numbers of works which are self-evidently not timeless because they have been resurrected after long periods of oblivion with significances quite (...)
     
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  35. An enquiry into the elementary principles of beauty in the works of nature and art.William Thomson - 1798 - New York,: Garland.
     
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  36. Open horizons. About the history of nature's representation in art.Gottfried Boehm - 2005 - Rivista di Estetica 45 (29):139-146.
     
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  37.  56
    Beauty in nature, beauty in art.Christopher Janaway - 1993 - British Journal of Aesthetics 33 (4):321-332.
    The article argues against various proposals to treat the term 'beauty' as standing for a single, generic concept of aesthetic value, which has application both to natural objects and to art. It argues that in Kant's aesthetic theory 'beauty' must be treated as ambiguous because in the case of art, but not in that of nature, part of beauty is the expession of aesthetic ideas. This gives rise to the dilemma: either beauty is always the ultimate aesthetic value of (...)
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  38.  62
    Interest, Nature, and Art.Paul Guyer - 1978 - Review of Metaphysics 31 (4):580-603.
    In this paper, however, I will argue that Kant’s restriction of interest to natural rather than artistic beauty should not be taken as a basic aspect of his aesthetic theory, and thus need not affect our assessment of that theory’s more basic claims. First, I will suggest that Kant’s theory of intellectual interest is not really necessary to explain what we ordinarily mean by an interest in beautiful objects—a desire to preserve them for repeated experience, a motivation for our efforts (...)
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  39.  7
    Nature in Frames: The Miseducation of the Idle Stare.Annie Schultz - 2024 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 58 (3):88-106.
    Students come into contact with the natural world and nonhuman others in a variety of scenarios. Of the embodied experiences with the nonhuman available to educational endeavors, the nature-based edutainment venue is growing in popularity. This article examines how such spaces work as ontological orderings—frames—for the human viewers and what the implications might be for an ecological sensibility. Through an exploration of Kant's and Dewey's philosophies of art, this article posits the implications of viewing nature as art, taking (...)
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  40.  31
    Paul Klee: Philosophical Vision, From Nature to Art.Paul Klee - 2012 - Mcmullen Museum of Art, Boston College. Edited by John Sallis.
    When Swiss artist Paul Klee died in 1940, he left behind not only paintings that are a testament to his prodigious skill and vision but also a trove of writings and lectures that highlight his impressive intellectual prowess. Paul Klee: Philosophical Vision: From Nature to Art is the fully illustrated catalog accompanying an eponymous exhibition opening in 2012 at the McMullen Museum of Art that focuses on the philosophical depth of Klee's art. Demonstrating how ideas developed in Klee's written (...)
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  41. Das Bild der Natur in der Romantik: Kunst als Philosophie und Wissenschaft.Nina Amstutz (ed.) - 2021 - Paderborn: Brill Wilhelm Fink.
    Der Band geht der wechselseitigen Durchdringung von visuellen Künsten und Naturwissenschaften bzw. Naturphilosophie im Kontext der europäischen Romantik nach.Die Romantik als eine geistige Bewegung entfaltete sich in Europa auf Grundlage der allgemeinen Überzeugung, dass Kunst eine Form von Wissenschaft sei und umgekehrt. Viele Dichter und Künstler sowie Naturwissenschaftler waren bestrebt, empirische und kreative Formen der Welterkundung miteinander zu verbinden. Die Aufsätze in diesem Sammelband untersuchen die Entstehung einer "romantischen Wissenschaft" und ihre Beziehung zur bildenden Kunst, worin objektive und subjektive Formen (...)
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  42.  12
    Sustaining Childhood Natures: The Art of Becoming with Water.Sarah Crinall - 2019 - Singapore: Imprint: Springer.
    This book examines sustainability learning with children, art and water in the new material, posthuman turn. A query into how we might sustain (our) childhood natures, the spaces between bodies and places are examined ontologically in daily conversations. Regarding philosophy, art, water and her children, the author asks, how can I sustain waterways if I am not sustaining myself? Theoretically disruptive and playful, the book introduces a new philosophy that combines existing philosophies of the new material and posthuman kind. The (...)
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  43.  40
    Nature in Medieval Thought: Some Approaches East & West (review).André Goddu - 2001 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (4):585-587.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 39.4 (2001) 585-587 [Access article in PDF] Chumaru Koyama, editor. Nature in Medieval Thought: Some Approaches East & West. Studien und Texte zur Geistesgeschichte des Mittelalters. Leiden: Brill, 2000. Pp. xiv + 183. Cloth, $65.00. The subtitle of this volume is misleading. The Japanese scholars represented (Koyama, Y. Iwata, and B. R. Inagaki) were all trained in Western medieval philosophy and are (...)
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  44. Beautiful surfaces: Kant on free and adherent beauty in nature and art.Alexander Rueger - 2008 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 16 (3):535 – 557.
    In contrast to rationalist views about beauty as a sort of perfection, Kant argues that judgements of taste about beauty are ‘entirely independent from the concept of perfection’ (5: 226).1 In the...
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  45. Crises in Art.Jan Biatostocki - 1986 - Diogenes 34 (133):1-19.
    In order to discuss our problem I propose to adopt a definition of art as an ensemble of man-made objects of specific character, of materials, tools and institutions, of people—those who produce and those who commission or look at works of art—and of techniques and skills mastered by the artists. Art—so broadly understood—has no sharp limits, it is an area connected by hundreds of links with the whole of social, economic, intellectual and spiritual life. It is exposed to various disturbances (...)
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  46.  8
    Künste und Natur: in Diskursen der Frühen Neuzeit.Barbara Becker-Cantarino & Hartmut Laufhütte (eds.) - 2000 - Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz.
    Das Nachdenken von Wissenschaftlern und Kunstlern uber das Verhaltnis von Natur und Kunsten, uber die begrundende, orientierende Qualitat der Kunst, ihr Bearbeitungs-, Veranderungs-, Deutungsrecht an der Natur oder ihre Abhangigkeit von der Natur ist alt. Das in den sechziger Jahren erwachte Interesse an der Barockliteratur hat der Literatur der fruhen Neuzeit in vielen Bereichen ganz neue und andere, vor allem in einzelne Kunste und Nationalkulturen ubergreifende Zusammenhange gelehrt, mit bis heute unabsehbaren und weiterwirkenden Folgen fur die Kulturgeschichte der Epoche.Die 65 (...)
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  47.  29
    Beauty in Nature and in Art.Gerald B. Phelan - 1935 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 11:175-179.
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  48.  6
    Paul Klee: Philosophical Vision, From Nature to Art.John Sallis (ed.) - 2012 - Mcmullen Museum of Art, Boston College.
    When Swiss artist Paul Klee died in 1940, he left behind not only paintings that are a testament to his prodigious skill and vision but also a trove of writings and lectures that highlight his impressive intellectual prowess. _Paul Klee: Philosophical Vision: From Nature to Art_ is the fully illustrated catalog accompanying an eponymous exhibition opening in 2012 at the McMullen Museum of Art that focuses on the philosophical depth of Klee’s art. Demonstrating how ideas developed in Klee’s written (...)
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  49.  15
    Reason and nature in the eighteenth century, 1714-1780.Ronald Walter Harris - 1968 - London,: Blandford P..
    “What do historians mean by “the Enlightenment”, and is the term applicable to eighteenth-century England? It is the theme of this book that the great intellectual tradition associated with the Renaissance disintegrated in the eighteenth century under the impact of the scientific revolution and the thought of John Locke. In its place there grew up a new emphasis upon individualism, a new awareness of the class structure, and, especially in the novel, a new interest in the claims of the lower (...)
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  50.  29
    The Original Nature of Art. The Significance of the Work of Art, Poetry and Language in the Thinking of Martin Heidegger. [REVIEW]Gerhard Krämling - 1987 - Philosophy and History 20 (2):138-140.
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