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3 ideas
636 | Beauty involves the Forms of order, symmetry and limit, which can be handled mathematically [Aristotle] |
Full Idea: The major Forms of the beautiful are order, symmetry and delimitation, and these are very much objects of the proofs of the mathematical sciences. | |
From: Aristotle (Metaphysics [c.324 BCE], 1078a31) |
635 | The good is found in actions, but beauty can exist without movement [Aristotle] |
Full Idea: The good is always in some action, whereas the beautiful can also be in things without movement. | |
From: Aristotle (Metaphysics [c.324 BCE], 1078a26) |
22688 | The Aristotelian idea that choices can be perceived needs literary texts to expound it [Nussbaum] |
Full Idea: To show forth the Aristotelian claim that 'the decision rests with perception', we need - either side by side with a philosophical outline or inside it - literary texts which display the complexity, indeterminacy, and sheer difficulty of moral choice. | |
From: Martha Nussbaum (The Golden Bowl, and Lit as Moral Philosophy [1983], II) | |
A reaction: Berys Gaut observes that this depends on a particularist view of moral choice (usually seen as Aristotelian), with little interest in principles. |