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Sublime
Sublime
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A01=Lap-Chuen Tsang
affectivity
Author_Lap-Chuen Tsang
Barnett Baruch Newman
Category=QDHR
Category=QDTJ
construal
Dan Sperber
David B Morris
Edmund Burke
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
evocation
FCT Moore
Immanuel Kant
instantiation
Longinus
Ludwig Wittgenstein
Martin Hollis
Samuel Monk
Sigmund Freud
Product details
- ISBN 9781580460279
- Weight: 394g
- Dimensions: 351 x 549mm
- Publication Date: 22 Apr 1998
- Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
An important work offering a viable theory for the concept of "Sublime" in philosophy.
This is a work of quite unusual philosophical interest, original and deeply insightful. Dr. Tsang argues on the one hand that sublimity is not a property of objects regarded as sublime, but belongs to our construal of objects, while on the other he also argues that when we so construe an object we are giving expression to some limit to our life, not an external barrier, but a limit internal to it. But what lies at the limit cannot be represented. So the sublime can be evoked by language, but not represented in it. This leads Dr. Tsang on to a philosophical analysis of evocation and of the evocative possibilities of a sublime object. What he says about evocation presupposes and requires for its completion an account of how affective elements are involved in the experience of the sublime and what he claims here is that there is no one feeling or type of feeling involved in the experience of the sublime, but that a wide range of different feelings may be involved on different occasions. The quality of the feeling is closely bound up with the character of the experience of the sublime as a limit-experience. Finally Dr. Tsang considers the cultural and social context of experiences of the sublime, both what is universally recognized as sublime, because bound up with the general conditions of human life, and what is specific to particular cultural and social contexts. He then moves to the conclusion to examine the relationship of the sublime to human willing. As a postscript there is an excellent treatment of Kant's theory of the sublime.
Sublime
€92.99
