The politics of representation are often a detriment to the appreciation of aesthetics. |
|
This eternal reality may be God, it may be eternal principles of justice or aesthetics, or it may be the ultimate laws of nature. |
|
But how many of us have ever appreciated the aesthetics of the underground terrain as we go from here to there? |
|
More disturbingly, Gonzalez's aesthetics, confirmed by his own poetry, seem overly obsessed with language and esoterica. |
|
His art is wonderfully representative of the essence of the philosophy of Indian aesthetics. |
|
It simultaneously reconstructs philosophical aesthetics, especially that of Kant and Hegel, from the perspective of modern art. |
|
An absolute answer is impossible, as it is basically a question of aesthetics. |
|
Officially, this means a doctorate in philosophy, specifically in aesthetics. |
|
Presumably, he intended follow up his ethical investigations with respective treatises on epistemology and aesthetics. |
|
Additionally, he wrote extensively on aesthetics, hermeneutics, and the philosophy of language. |
|
In keeping with the conception of philosophy mentioned above, aesthetics was thought of as meta-criticism. |
|
Richard's own work synthesizes and elaborates upon this eclectic mix of aesthetics, philosophy, and area studies. |
|
We teach many things, but mostly I teach aesthetics, philosophy of the image. |
|
His 1829 essay on Kant's aesthetics won the Prussian royal prize in philosophy. |
|
However she admits it is necessary to have an appreciation of aesthetics as well as the technical skills. |
|
A butterfly's wing is a uniquely visual exhibition, not only of the aesthetics of nature, but of the machinery of evolution. |
|
The addition of these trees to the school grounds will enhance the aesthetics of the landscape. |
|
I spend less in the rooms and more in the common spaces, where wear and aesthetics are a concern. |
|
Thanks again for what you are doing to contribute to an appreciation of aesthetics. |
|
There is a lack of overarching concern for aesthetics or consistency that runs deep within our political infrastructure. |
|
|
Trends in gardening come and go, but individuality and aesthetics will always be in vogue. |
|
If you doubt the power of the aesthetics of clockwork, look at the prices in a smart watchmaker's shop. |
|
We can do this while protecting critical watersheds, forest aesthetics and wildlife. |
|
Perhaps I just hated the aesthetics of an event where he is the prom king, in his doofusy XXL hockey shirts and calf-length jorts. |
|
In the context of Indian aesthetics, rasa is understood as the art recipient's aesthetic experience. |
|
Mindful of public aesthetics and my reputation, I put the garage door down first. |
|
Chartres new luminosity and stained-glass windows illustrate a second principle of medieval aesthetics. |
|
He constructed a system which embraces metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, aesthetics, ethics, and the meaning of life. |
|
Or is it an aesthetic philosophy as distinct from a philosophical aesthetics, such as Adorno's Aesthetic Theory? |
|
Under his treatment, ethics, sociology, aesthetics, and religion become a part of the history of the Absolute. |
|
In Hegelian aesthetics, the sacred art of the sublime can only be the art of poetry. |
|
They can also be read together to form a view of Kant's theory of aesthetics and teleology. |
|
I have always wanted to use that fun quote since taking a philosophy course of aesthetics years ago. |
|
He is the first in particular to distinguish, perhaps too sharply, between aesthetics and the philosophy of art. |
|
Is Nietzsche the one who first articulated the apollonian v. dionysian split in aesthetics? |
|
The diverse needs of wildlife, aesthetics, bio-diversity and recreation all have to be juggled. |
|
First we're doing the sound, next is the lighting, at the same time we're gonna be redoing the room, the aesthetics surrounding the dancefloor. |
|
Amis has always insisted that aesthetics are the sole standard for judging the worth of literature. |
|
My ultimate interest is creating a new hybrid and amalgamated vision by integrating these different languages and variant aesthetics at once. |
|
The audience soaked in the restful ambience as it looked forward to the lecture on aesthetics in Indian art and thought. |
|
|
Dental implant restorations proved an excellent way to restore function, improving aesthetics and easily maintained. |
|
What were the attitudes and aesthetics reflected in the flurry of anthologies published then? |
|
It is certainly not a retrograde piece of aesthetics, but it hardly seems to break the new ground that was hoped for, either. |
|
But flat-panel LCD, or liquid crystal displays, win the aesthetics battle by a long shot. |
|
Certainly, as British imperial influence spread round the world in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, so too did British aesthetics. |
|
I am impressed by the aesthetics and functional utility of their cover designs, and the attractiveness of their promotional materials. |
|
The superfield within philosophy known as axiology includes both ethics and aesthetics and is unified by each sub-branch's concern with value. |
|
As for aesthetics, the Library Board is known for its bad taste in architecture. |
|
Brink makes extensive use of native terminology to explain the essence of Mande aesthetics. |
|
The aesthetics of the novel turns on a this-worldly relation between concrete subjects. |
|
That human minds thrive on aesthetics is a curse when trying to comprehend new surroundings. |
|
Her conceptual gestures are hybrids, as dependent on beat-generation strategies and Japanese aesthetics as they are self-consciously futuristic. |
|
Space-saving furniture, especially cots, sofas and beanbags, demonstrated that it was possible to mix aesthetics with functionality. |
|
Mature gentlemen should cultivate some sensibility and awareness of the aesthetics of these things. |
|
Furthermore, his trademark fusion of ornate mysticism and lurid pop-art aesthetics had taken a toehold in New York's art scene as well. |
|
Other sources of identity could be found in the common experience of change in the aesthetics of worship and church architecture. |
|
Many French scholars note that these requirements represent a dangerous trend because it forces the trier of fact to judge aesthetics. |
|
He will probably not treat aesthetics as a bolt-on, recognising that it's a must-have in the current market. |
|
These highly intellectual and academic discourses on aesthetics, literature and the like, leave me feeling very unintellectual indeed. |
|
Is Roland Barthes correct that naturalization is the great, unspoken secret of bourgeois aesthetics? |
|
|
Female bowerbirds, for example, choose mates based on the aesthetics of their mating dance. |
|
It runs into unsurmountable conflicts between the political project to which it is committed and the lures of its Gothic aesthetics. |
|
This paradox was at the center of the focus on the aesthetics of faith that the exhibition presented but left largely untheorized. |
|
The artistic elements are rich and varied, reflecting changing aesthetics as well as technological advances. |
|
As a Southern Baptist, and minister of the same, the author chafed under the divorce of piety from aesthetics and the life of the mind. |
|
Eventually the aesthetics cancel each other out and it's just about bodies moving through space. |
|
The prize goes to his splendidly illustrated book on the archaeology and aesthetics of the Renaissance culture. |
|
Many architecture critics go beyond opinion about the aesthetics of individual buildings, including reporting on sprawl and urban development. |
|
The works were produced by fifty young Scandinavian designers, and represent the cutting edge in Nordic aesthetics. |
|
An adjoining room spoke of a man with a nose for aesthetics and simple comfort. |
|
The sets and costumes are great but all these aesthetics were obvious from the beginning. |
|
Sadly the courtesy car's seats have been covered more with economy in mind than aesthetics. |
|
Soyinka discusses material..with ample cross-references to Greek drama, Nietzschean aesthetics, Jungian philosophy and Sartrean opinionizing. |
|
Understanding the historicity of Adorno's strictures and imperatives is an unavoidable task for critical theory and aesthetics today. |
|
In this way, film pushes feminist studies to develop new theories, or to challenge accepted male theories of aesthetics and entertainment. |
|
They were more accurately the hijackers of art and aesthetics from the people and from everyday living. |
|
German treatments of aesthetics and politics clustered around Benjamin and Adorno. |
|
As usual, the old dowager's preoccupation with color and markings had more to do with politics than aesthetics. |
|
Maybe the rejection by malls and movie theaters is based on aesthetics rather than politics. |
|
In its broadest sense, aesthetics refers to the ability to perceive through the senses. |
|
|
After all, a little aesthetics might create a stronger desire to keep the injector with them at all times. |
|
In this instance, everyone had an aesthetic opinion, as if aesthetics had anything to do with the sacrificial slaughter of 6,000 innocents. |
|
Science, for all its instrumentalism, is not, at its best, in conflict with aesthetics but in conspiracy with it. |
|
This technique allows for the possibility of improving breast aesthetics in women with involutional changes after childbirth or menopause. |
|
Equally, one might regard it as a polemic against the reflexive association of aesthetics with false consciousness. |
|
The success of such a project would transform the language of aesthetics irrecoverably. |
|
Three women huddle together with reference books on their laps and discuss post-colonialism, aesthetics, and ideology. |
|
Her medium and subject matter flew in the face of traditional figurative aesthetics, feminist proprieties, and postmodernist biases, all at once. |
|
With few exceptions, functionalism in Sweden was a matter of aesthetics, not of ideology. |
|
He brought these disparate objects together to demonstrate their kinship and identify their aesthetics as one with their functionalism. |
|
Eight artists celebrate the digital playground of games, sounds and the aesthetics of computer gaming. |
|
The result is a breathtaking, psychedelic form of artificial life whose fitness factor is the ability to tickle the aesthetics of computer geeks. |
|
This development has to be considered in the more general context of photography and aesthetics. |
|
Yes, there's a clean-line primness to the design, evoking a corporate-committee-don't-offend style that won't match the aesthetics of some. |
|
Relational aesthetics tries to decode or understand the type of relations to the viewer produced by the work of art. |
|
His approach earned considerable funds for the school but disaffected most of the staff, who hated the idea of advertising dominating aesthetics. |
|
This book's hours with the poets offer not so much the aesthetics of the avant-garde as those of the guard's van. |
|
Consequently design, or more specifically aesthetics, is the chief enabler. |
|
What happens in those bull sessions is that you are helped along in the process of forming your taste and your aesthetics and your attitude to literature. |
|
However, any outright refusal of Western aesthetics must be qualified. |
|
|
Shifting the emphasis from matters of taste, discrimination or aesthetics, media education now borrowed from new sources and began to ask new questions. |
|
The distinctions between these two domains are frequently contested and debated in the realms of semiotics, structuralism, poetics, and aesthetics. |
|
It is acknowledged, that in the end, in Web page design, decisions can come down to a compromise between the aesthetics and search engine visibility. |
|
Ronny became a tiler, a craft that requires a steady hand and a good sense of aesthetics and symmetry, no doubt useful traits for a bodybuilder as well. |
|
Moreover, the pictures employ a lush tonality and fussy delight in detail, not the austere formal economy associated with modernist photographic aesthetics. |
|
But then, who gives a toss for outmoded aesthetics these days, eh? |
|
A novel dealing with, among many other interesting things, the aesthetics of thieving. |
|
We often talk about religion in terms of commitment and ideology, but the aesthetics and experience matter, too. |
|
It was a tense matchup that made up in suspense for what it lacked in aesthetics. |
|
Go ahead, write M.I.A. off as a faux-radical relying on the aesthetics of revolution to sell records. |
|
Of course, the aesthetics on view here are all about comedy, and irony and poking fun and paradox. |
|
Meanwhile, the cable-stayed bridge was being erected over the main shipping channel, again with every consideration for the environment and aesthetics. |
|
Though the designers have markedly different aesthetics, both articulate how intrinsic personalization is to the process. |
|
The radius bilge shape so closely resembles a fully developed round bilge hull that there is virtually no difference as far as performance or aesthetics are concerned. |
|
He has written on such topics as the mnemotechnics of interfaces, the cultural implications of nanotechnology, the aesthetics of speed, and crash test dummies. |
|
Has no one heard of Schopenauer or the philosophy of aesthetics? |
|
The mobilization of women in the construction of new concepts of modern living in Japan intertwined aesthetics, domestic hygiene, and national identity. |
|
The driving force behind the aesthetics of modularity is a transformation in the geometry of class, the shift from a national to a global process of class formation. |
|
Just as he stints discussion of aesthetics, so he repeatedly writes as if authorial intention were merely instrumental, a matter of having one's say about certain issues. |
|
Of course, Brennan's purpose is to revise the idea that formalism was monolithic and uninventive, not to situate the Stieglitz circle's aesthetics in historical context. |
|
|
Minimalist aesthetics and Cagean ideals shared the goal of a more direct, unmediated, authentic art experience that transgressed the boundary between art and life. |
|
When we come to consider the aesthetics of the novel, what we are talking about is the extent to which fiction communicates emotion to its natural audience. |
|
Such exclusive concentration on one affect or sensation can make disgust seem like the single element that has generated the last 250 years of European aesthetics. |
|
The book examines the changing aesthetics of metropolitan areas, architecture as both a fine and a social art, and the redevelopment of Chicago's lakefront. |
|
Interestingly, these two currents in the study of US ethnic literatures correspond to a parallel divergence on questions of politics and aesthetics. |
|
The appeal of Resnick's account is enhanced by the lure of Bohemia, which he and Passlof enrich with anecdote and intertwine with aesthetics and social history. |
|
Now, whether you seek our civilisation in religion, language, values, aesthetics or habits of thought, you get only a myth or a sniff of it, never the real thing. |
|
Kant is an 18th century German philosopher whose work initiated dramatic changes in the fields of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and teleology. |
|
Today, perspiration triumphed over inspiration, style over sinew, brawn over brain, athletics over aesthetics, attrition over attraction and haymakers over playmakers. |
|
Connective aesthetics strikes at the root of this alienation by dissolving the mechanical division between self and the world that has prevailed during the modern epoch. |
|
Their show, which comes to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this month, is a collision between lowbrow Las Vegas dazzle and highbrow European aesthetics. |
|
Women like Isabel Babson were often active in the Lyceum and devoted more time to pursuing the relationships between nature, aesthetics and metaphysics. |
|
It looked fantastic, as if prepared for a coffee-table book on cocktails, but quite apart from aesthetics and taste, it delivered the kick of a young mule. |
|
I had always rejected the suburban ideal of the carefully clipped and methodically poisoned greensward, with its connotations of Babbittry and mundane middle-class aesthetics. |
|
You posit that talking about the aesthetics of scent in traditional aesthetic terms makes scent subservient to other disciplines. |
|
More than making it pretty, this attention to aesthetics makes inside job effective. |
|
She was not an intellectual, but she was interested in the aesthetics of intellectualism. |
|
However, groynes are increasingly viewed as detrimental to the aesthetics of the coastline and face opposition in many coastal communities. |
|
Artisans, such as engravers, became more concerned with aesthetics rather than just perfecting their craft. |
|
Her work rests at the forefront of artwork connecting conceptualism and handiwork, activism and aesthetics. |
|
|
Think aesthetics as politics, and academic credentials as peerage. |
|
The meanings of the motifs may be categorised into aesthetics, ethics, human relations, and concepts. |
|
This movement advocated rationality as a means to establish an authoritative system of aesthetics, ethics, and logic. |
|
However, in linguistics, there is no differentiation among accents in regard to their prestige, aesthetics, or correctness. |
|
Jonson's aesthetics hark back to the Middle Ages and his characters embody the theory of humours, which was based on contemporary medical theory. |
|
They develop a metapsychological understanding of art while raising doubts about the self-serving nature of psychoanalytic aesthetics. |
|
To avoid detracting from the aesthetics of the primary cables, the secondary cables are very slender and are not very noticeable. |
|
Due to technological innovations and changing aesthetics, this crispness has become an integral part of the pipe band sound. |
|
Yet, as dozens took turns addressing the RBOC board, their concerns went well beyond aesthetics. |
|
Yes, when it comes to the aesthetics of marital coupledom, to paraphrase that old saying, I'm punching several stones below my weight. |
|
The combined treatment plan with the prosthodontist and periodontist provided for the complete rehabilitation with full function and aesthetics. |
|
In Japan in the 1980s, visual kei was strongly influenced by glam rock aesthetics. |
|
Rococo soon fell out of favor, being seen by many as a gaudy and superficial movement emphasizing aesthetics over meaning. |
|
Leni Riefenstahl was widely noted for her aesthetics and innovations as a filmmaker. |
|
The nature of art and related concepts, such as creativity and interpretation, are explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics. |
|
Buddhism has profoundly impacted Japanese psychology, metaphysics, and aesthetics. |
|
The history of Japanese painting exhibits synthesis and competition between native Japanese aesthetics and adaptation of imported ideas. |
|
Johnson did not attempt to create schools of theories to analyse the aesthetics of literature. |
|
As for aesthetics, hand-carved scrollwork and dentils that had been concealed over the years by paint or acoustic tile now greet the eye. |
|
Marshall viewed aesthetics as a special branch of introspective psychology dealing with algedonics, the science of pleasure and pain. |
|
|
With aesthetics in mind a minimum number of traction poles are used and whenever possible the wire is anchored onto neighbouring buildings. |
|
The objections voiced last week were not about aesthetics or architectural integrity, but about the addition's apparent irreversibility. |
|
For Hamady, that marriage of functionality and aesthetics is exemplified perfectly in the meem lounge chair. |
|
Miley Cyrus prompts exposition on the aesthetics of underwired lingerie, sexualisation and their correlation to social media traffic. |
|
This is due to there being too much melanin on the surface of the skin,' explains Victoria Smith, aesthetics practitioner at Absolute Aesthetics. |
|
Irony is essential because it ensures the minimalization of an aesthetics of horror. |
|
In either case, if aesthetics call for control, they can be treated by spraying with a commercial fungicide containing Mancozeb or Triadimefon. |
|
In philosophy, he wrote on aesthetics, ethics, government, metaphysics, politics, economics, psychology, rhetoric and theology. |
|
Each indicates the intrication of serpentine lines with De Quincey's diverse interests in aesthetics, natural science, philosophy, and theology. |
|
The internationally certified artificial turf system offers colorability, enabling customized aesthetics and design for the playing surface. |
|
In addition to his research, Hardy is remembered for his 1940 essay on the aesthetics of mathematics, entitled A Mathematician's Apology. |
|
Following the Great Fire of London, Wren rebuilt fifty three churches, where Baroque aesthetics are apparent primarily in dynamic structure and multiple changing views. |
|
In the exhibition's promotional text, Madra explains that the Dada movement can be considered the basic background for the concepts and aesthetics of contemporary art today. |
|
They question the validity of current frameworks that preference Western aesthetics as a universal norm against which the GDR appears as a deviation. |
|
Combining science, aesthetics, and technique, cartography builds on the premise that reality can be modeled in ways that communicate spatial information effectively. |
|
The Storm window and door range offer all the aesthetics of timber, a window designed to replicate period features, that are normally only found with traditional joinery. |
|
Over time the aesthetics of the design became more important, as the castle's appearance and size began to reflect the prestige and power of its occupant. |
|
Philosophers almost universally reject this view and hold that the properties and aesthetics of art extend beyond materials, techniques, and form. |
|
Ours is a viscerally grounded aesthetics, a neurological vehicle with thousands of years of momentum before language stood hitchhiking and kibbitzing at the side of its road. |
|
That may be meant to suggest another problem entirely, Jake's agenbite of inwit, but it's less trivial than it seems, part of what Julius calls the aesthetics of ugliness. |
|
|
John Carpenter's The Thing has been included on the bill to satisfy all you ketchup fans with its own blend of extreme body horror and B-movie aesthetics. |
|
The plan, according to the spokesperson for the HBC builder, is perfect for homeowners looking for a perfect blend of aesthetics, entertainment, and practicality. |
|
According to the company the polymer provides breakthrough performance in hair styling applications without compromising gel rheology or aesthetics. |
|
The scavengers and those who buy the material are almost always unaware that the material is radioactive and it is selected for its aesthetics or scrap value. |
|
Their very diverse layouts are the result of the different aesthetics that were held as ideal during the development of each of these planned communities. |
|
This humanist approach favored reason, nature and aesthetics. |
|
For years our industry has strived to increase the energy efficiency of concrete roof tile through reflectivity, some would say, to the detriment of aesthetics. |
|
Then they detail surgical techniques by such anatomical regions as belt lipectomy, circumferential body contouring, buttocks aesthetics, brachioplasty, and breast reshaping. |
|
Ruskin's explorations of nature and aesthetics in the fifth and final volume of Modern Painters focused on Giorgione, Paolo Veronese, Titian and Turner. |
|
This biologism included the search for natural explanations in ethics, psychology, aesthetics, and other traditional areas of philosophical inquiry. |
|