Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 42British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 40
... friendship : ( 1 ) friendship based on need , ( 2 ) friendship based on taste , and ( 3 ) friendship based on moral attitude.2 These are fairly close to the three types recognized by Aristotle ; but in the present passage , perhaps ...
... friendship : ( 1 ) friendship based on need , ( 2 ) friendship based on taste , and ( 3 ) friendship based on moral attitude.2 These are fairly close to the three types recognized by Aristotle ; but in the present passage , perhaps ...
Page 54
... friendship . Certainly the love in friendship cannot be a sudden overwhelming passion ( Affekt ) ; for this is blind in its choice and is likely to go up in smoke . It may indeed be sweet to enjoy a reciprocal possession bordering on ...
... friendship . Certainly the love in friendship cannot be a sudden overwhelming passion ( Affekt ) ; for this is blind in its choice and is likely to go up in smoke . It may indeed be sweet to enjoy a reciprocal possession bordering on ...
Page 55
... friendship includes within itself also what in the Lectures Kant describes as the friendship of taste , which in certain respects is akin to the friendship described by Aristotle as aiming at the pleasant and yet as being also ...
... friendship includes within itself also what in the Lectures Kant describes as the friendship of taste , which in certain respects is akin to the friendship described by Aristotle as aiming at the pleasant and yet as being also ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19556 | 5 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir George Clark | 17 |
THE NATURE Of Recitative Aspects of Art Lecture By J A Westrup | 27 |
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