Get this book in print
About this book
My library
Books on Google Play
LONDON:
PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
A VINDICATION of Natural SOCIETY: or, a View of the Miseries
and Evils arising to Mankind from every Species of Artificial
Society
A PHILOSOPHICAL INQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN of our Ideas of THE
SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL; with an Introductory Discourse con-
cerning Taste
Introduction. On Taste
SECT. I. Novelty
II. Pain and Pleasure
PART I.
III. The Difference between the Removal of Pain, and po-
sitive Pleasure
iv. Of Delight and Pleasure, as opposed to each other
v. Joy and Grief
yi. Of the Passions which belong to Self-preservation
70
71
73
74
IX. The final cause of the Difference between the Passions
belonging to Self-preservation, and those which regard the
XIV. The Effects of Sympathy in the Distresses of others
xv. Of the Effects of Tragedy
ib.
81
IV. Of the Difference between Clearness and Obscurity with
II. Proportion not the Cause of Beauty in Vegetables
III. Proportion not the Cause of Beauty in Animals
IV. Proportion not the Cause of Beauty in the Human
Species
v. Proportion further considered
VI. Fitness not the cause of Beauty
VII. The real Effects of Fitness
113
114
17
118
122
125
127
xv. Gradual Variation
IX. Perfection not the cause of Beauty
x. How far the Idea of Beauty may be applied to the Quali-
ties of the Mind
130
XI. How far the Idea of Beauty may be applied to Virtue
131
ON THE SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL.-PART IV.
SECT. I. Of the efficient Cause of the Sublime and Beautiful
II. Association
VI. How Pain can be a Cause of Delight
VII. Exercise necessary for the finer Organs
148
VIII. Why things not dangerous sometimes produce a Passion
like Terror
149
IX. Why visual Objects of great Dimensions are sublime
x. Unity, why requisite to Vastness
XI. The artificial Infinite
151
XVI. Why Darkness is terrible
XII. The Vibrations must be similar
XIII. The Effects of Succession in visual objects explained
XIV. Locke's Opinion concerning Darkness considered
xv. Darkness terrible in its own nature
XVII. The Effects of Blackness
II. The Common Effects of Poetry, not by raising Ideas of
v. Examples that Words may affect without raising Images 173
OBSERVATIONS on a late PUBLICATION, INTituled The PRESENT
STATE OF THE NATION
SPEECHES AT MR. BURKE'S ARRIVAL AT BRISTOL, AND AT THE
CONCLUSION OF THE POLL
185
306
382
438
SPEECH ON MOVING HIS RESOLUTIONS FOR CONCILIATION WITH
AMERICA
456