1757 Works: 1757 Architecture, 1757 Books, 1757 Operas, 1757 Plays, 1757 Treaties, Mount Vernon, Wellingsb ttel Manor, Bragg's Mill, Ashdon

1757 Works: 1757 Architecture, 1757 Books, 1757 Operas, 1757 Plays, 1757 Treaties, Mount Vernon, Wellingsb ttel Manor, Bragg's Mill, Ashdon


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful is a 1757 treatise on aesthetics, written by Edmund Burke. It attracted the attention of prominent Continental thinkers such as Denis Diderot and Immanuel Kant. In short, the Beautiful, according to Burke, is what is well-formed and aesthetically pleasing, whereas the Sublime is what has the power to compel and destroy us. The preference for the Sublime over the Beautiful was to mark the transition from the Neoclassical to the Romantic era. The origins of our ideas of the beautiful and the sublime, for Burke, can be understood by means of their causal structures. According to Aristotelian physics and metaphysics, causation can be divided into formal, material, efficient, and final causes. The formal cause of beauty is the passion of love; the material cause concerns aspects of certain objects such as smallness, smoothness, delicacy, etc.; the efficient cause is the calming of our nerves; the final cause is God's providence. What is most peculiar and original to Burke's view of beauty is that it cannot be understood by the traditional bases of beauty: proportion, fitness, or perfection. The sublime also has a causal structure that is unlike that of beauty. Its formal cause is thus the passion of fear (especially the fear of death); the material cause is equally aspects of certain objects such as vastness, infinity, magnificence, etc.; its efficient cause is the tension of our nerves; the final cause is God having created and battled Satan, as expressed in and Milton's great epic 'Paradise Lost '. Burke's was the first complete philosophical exposition for separating the beautiful and the sublime into their own respective rational categories. Kant's comment Kant praised Burke for not claiming

1757 Works: 1757 Architecture, 1757 Books, 1757 Operas, 1757 Plays, 1757 Treaties, Mount Vernon, Wellingsb ttel Manor, Bragg's Mill, Ashdon
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