| S©ıren Kierkegaard - Philosophy - 1985 - 400 pages
...bursts upon him that wondrous vision which is the very soul of the beauty he has toiled so long for. It is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes...as there, this way as that way, the same to every worshiper as it is to every other. Nor will his vision of the beautiful take the form of a face, or... | |
| Wendy Chapkis - Health & Fitness - 1986 - 230 pages
...singular, uniform, unchanging and eternal form; something beyond the physical body. Beauty, says Plato, is "an everlasting loveliness which neither comes...way, the same to every worshipper as it is to every other."13 Beauty is thus removed from the diverse and changing world of the living, for while Platonic... | |
| Giovanni Reale - Philosophy - 1985 - 464 pages
...bursts upon him that wondrous vision which is the very soul of the beauty he has toiled so long for. It is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes...this way as that way, the same to every worshipper to every other. Nor will his vision of the beautiful take the form of a face, or of hands, or of anything... | |
| Géza von Molnár - Romanticism - 1986 - 286 pages
...bursts upon him that wondrous vision which is the very soul of the beauty he has toiled so long for, lt is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes nor goes, which neither flowers nor fades . . . Nor will his vision of the beautiful take the form of a face, or of hands, or of anything that... | |
| Elizabeth V. Spelman - Social Science - 1990 - 246 pages
...otherwise sense are real: the beautiful things we can hold in our hands are not Beauty itself, which is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes nor...same to every worshipper as it is to every other. (Symposium 22 la) Only the soul can know the Forms, those eternal and unchanging denizens of reality;... | |
| Marilyn Nagy - Psychology - 1991 - 434 pages
...mounting step by step the heavenly ladder, suddenly achieve the wondrous vision of beauty itself—an "everlasting loveliness which neither comes nor goes, which neither flowers nor fades" (211a). If we succeed in obtaining this vision then we must no longer be in continual search for the... | |
| E. Jane Burns - Literary Criticism - 1993 - 304 pages
...lesser bodily realm. If women arc beautiful, that beauty is but a pale reflection of real Beauty, that "everlasting loveliness which neither comes nor goes, which neither flowers nor fades" (Symposium, 221a, "Woman as Body," u2). Plato uses the lives of women, as Elizabeth Spelman has shown,... | |
| Philip Koch - Philosophy - 1994 - 400 pages
...bursts upon him that wondrous vision which is the very soul of the beauty he has toiled so long for. It is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes...way, the same to every worshipper as it is to every other.81 While for Plato, contemplation of the Form of Beauty comes as the culmination of philosophical... | |
| Nancy Tuana - Philosophy - 2010 - 306 pages
...otherwise sense are real: the beautiful things we can hold in our hands are not Beauty itself, which is "an everlasting loveliness which neither comes...same to every worshipper as it is to every other" (Symposium 221a). Only the soul can know the Forms, those eternal and unchanging denizens of reality;... | |
| Bat-Ami Bar On - Philosophy - 1994 - 270 pages
...otherwise sense are real: the beautiful things we can hold in our hands are not Beauty itself, which is an everlasting loveliness which neither comes nor...the same to every worshipper as it is to every other (Symposium 221 a) Only the soul can know the Forms, those eternal and unchanging denizens of reality;... | |
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