Arnold Isenberg
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- | 'It seems reasonable to suppose that the critic is thinking of another quality, no idea of which is transmitted to us by his language, which he sees and which by his use of language he gets us to see. This quality is, of course, a wavelike contour; ...' ''[[Æsthetics and Language]]'' (1954) by [[William R. Elton]] | + | "It seems reasonable to suppose that the critic is thinking of another quality, no idea of which is transmitted to us by his language, which he sees and which by his use of language he gets us to see. This quality is, of course, a wavelike contour; ..."--Arnold Isenberg, “Critical Communication,” The Philosophical Review 58, no. 4 (1949): 341, cited in ''[[Æsthetics and Language]]'' (1954) by [[William R. Elton]] |
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"It seems reasonable to suppose that the critic is thinking of another quality, no idea of which is transmitted to us by his language, which he sees and which by his use of language he gets us to see. This quality is, of course, a wavelike contour; ..."--Arnold Isenberg, “Critical Communication,” The Philosophical Review 58, no. 4 (1949): 341, cited in Æsthetics and Language (1954) by William R. Elton |
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Arnold Isenberg (1911 - 1965) was a philosopher, co-author of Aesthetic Theories: Studies in the Philosophy of Art.
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