Skip to main content

On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics

0.0
Browse all genres
ISBN
0820425281

On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics is a aesthetics, british, british aesthetics book by Giancarlo Carabelli.

About this book

This study is an original approach to the notion of "golden mean" in eighteenth-century culture. It bravely combines intellectual history and material history, spanning the fields of philosophy, aesthetics, painting, sociology, optics, music, theater and garden history in an effort to cross the borders of academic writing, in the stylistic treatment of the subject. Giancarlo Carabelli examines the "golden mean" both in one of the highlights of Enlightenment philosophy - David Hume's essays and his discussion of the middle station of life and of the standard of taste - and in a modest artifact, "intermediate structure" par excellence: the invisible fence of the ha-ha, that magical "middle," that "simple enchantment," as Walpole called it, that was typical of eighteenth-century "modern garden".

About the Author

is the author of On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics. Browse their full catalog on Booklogr.

Explore more books by Giancarlo Carabelli

Editions & Formats

Reviews

No reviews yet. Have you read this book? Share your thoughts with the Booklogr community.

Sign in Sign in to write a review

Frequently Asked Questions

What genre is On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics?+

On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics is a Aesthetics, British, British Aesthetics, Gardens, History, Hume, david, 1711-1776 book.

What is On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics about?+

This study is an original approach to the notion of "golden mean" in eighteenth-century culture. It bravely combines intellectual history and material history, spanning the fields of philosophy, aesthetics, painting, sociology, optics, music, theater and garden history in an effort to cross the bord...

Who wrote On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics?+

On Hume and eighteenth-century aesthetics was written by Giancarlo Carabelli.