Introductory Philosophy a Text book for Colleges And High Schools

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(a) To be beautiful, an object must not lack any of its essential parts, functions, or elements. // must possess a certain perfection, completeness, energy, and life, varying of course with the type to which it belongs. Incompleteness and deformity are always ugly and displeasing. The application of this is clear in the natural order. See why one horse is pronounced beautiful, and another not; why a fertile cornfield, or a forest with abundant vege- tation, or a high mountain, etc. , are beauti
...ful, whereas the field with brambles or a few corn-stalks, the small elevation and hill, produce no such impression. We rather call pretty (not to say cute) that which is of small proportions. The elements or aspects of the whole object may be considered apart, and found beautiful, e. G. The facade of an edifice, the face of a hunchback, etc. , but then they are considered as complete in themselves. Again, and for the same reason, an ugly person may perform a beautiful action; in an ordinary composition there may be found beautiful passages, etc.

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