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单词 aesthetic
释义

aestheticn.adj.

Brit. /iːsˈθɛtɪk/, /ᵻsˈθɛtɪk/, /ɛsˈθɛtɪk/, U.S. /ɛsˈθɛdɪk/, /əsˈθɛdɪk/
Forms: 1700s– aesthetic, 1700s– esthetic, 1800s– aisthetic.
Origin: A borrowing from Greek; partly modelled on a German lexical item. Etymon: Greek αἰσθητικός.
Etymology: Ultimately < ancient Greek αἰσθητικός of or relating to sense perception, sensitive, perceptive < αἰσθητός sensible, perceptible ( < the stem of αἰσθάνεσθαι to perceive (see aesthesis n.) + -τός , suffix forming verbal adjectives) + -ικός -ic suffix. In use as noun (in senses A. 1, A. 2) and in early use as adjective after German Ästhetik, noun (1744; also †Aesthetik , †Aesthetic ) and ästhetisch, adjective (1748 as †aesthetisch ), which are in turn after post-classical Latin aesthetica , noun (A . G. Baumgarten, 1735: see quots. 1735, 1750 in the note below); compare post-classical Latin aestheticus (adjective) of or relating to sensory perception, (noun) person who studies aesthetics, critic (both 1750 in Baumgarten Aesthetica). Compare also (all < post-classical Latin, in some cases via another modern European language): French esthétique, noun (1753 in sense ‘philosophy of the beautiful or of art’, 1803 in sense ‘science of perception by the senses’, 1819 in sense ‘set of rules or standards by which art is judged’, 1901 in sense ‘pleasing appearance, beauty’) and adjective (1798; 1888 or earlier designating cosmetic surgery), Italian estetica, noun (1756 in sense ‘philosophy of the beautiful or of art’, a1861 in sense ‘pleasing appearance’), estetico, adjective (1772 in sense ‘of or relating to the perception, appreciation, or criticism of that which is beautiful’, 1819 in sense ‘pleasing in appearance’), Spanish estética, noun (1793), estético, adjective (a1862).Post-classical Latin aesthetica was introduced by the German philosopher A. G. Baumgarten (1714–62). Although Baumgarten defined the Latin word as ‘science of cognition by the senses’, in accordance with the sense of the ulterior etymon ancient Greek αἰσθητικός , he also intended aesthetica to cover the sense ‘criticism of good taste’, and it was chiefly in this sense that the Latin noun and its derivatives were adapted into German and other European languages (compare sense A. 2a). Compare the following:1735 A. G. Baumgarten Meditationes philosophicae de nonnullis ad poema pertinentibus §116 Sint ergo νοητα cognoscenda facultate superiore obiectum Logices, αισθητα επιστημης αισθητικης siue Aestheticae. [Therefore the object of logic are the νοητα which are to be recognized by the superior faculty, the αισθητα επιστημης αισθητικης or things perceived by the aesthetic understanding.]1750 A. G. Baumgarten Aesthetica 1 Aesthetica (theoria liberalium artium, gnoseologia inferior, ars pulcre cogitandi, ars analogi rationis,) est scientia cognitionis sensitivae. [Aesthetics (the theory of liberal arts, lower gnosiology, the art of beautiful thought, the art of proportion) is the science of sensitive perception.] Modern usage of the word and its family largely reflects Baumgarten's use. However, there is also another strand of meaning (sense A. 1), which originated in German with the philosopher Kant; Kant used German Ästhetik in the sense ‘science dealing with the principles of perception by the senses’, and criticized Baumgarten's use as inaccurate on philosophical as well as etymological grounds:1781 I. Kant Critik der reinen Vernunft 21 Eine Wissenschaft von allen Principien der Sinnlichkeit a priori nenne ich die transcendentale Aesthetik. [Note:] Die Deutschen sind die einzige [sic], welche sich iezt des Worts Aesthetik bedienen, um dadurch das zu bezeichnen, was andre Critik des Geschmacks heissen. Es liegt hier eine verfehlte Hoffnung zum Grunde, die der vortreffliche Analyst Baumgarten faßte, die critische Beurtheilung des Schönen unter Vernunftprincipien zu bringen, und die Regeln derselben zur Wissenschaft zu erheben...Ist es rathsam, diese Benennung wiederum eingehen zu lassen, und sie derienigen Lehre aufzubehalten, die wahre Wissenschaft ist, wodurch man auch der Sprache und dem Sinne der Alten näher treten würde, bei denen die Eintheilung der Erkentniß in αἴσθητα και νόητα sehr berühmt war. [The science of all the principles of sensibility à priori, I call Transcendental Æsthetic. The Germans are the only people who at present use this word to indicate what others call the critique of taste. At the foundation of this term lies the disappointed hope, which the eminent analyst, Baumgarten, conceived, of subjecting the criticism of the beautiful to principles of reason, and so of elevating its rules into a science...It is advisable to give up the use of the term as designating the critique of taste, and to apply it solely to that doctrine, which is true science,—the science of the laws of sensibility—and thus come nearer to the language and the sense of the ancients in their well-known division of the objects of cognition into αἴσθητα και νόητα.] For early comments on the use of the words aesthetic and aesthetical in English, compare the following:1832 Philol. Museum 1 369 Beautiful and ugly depend on principles of taste, which it would be very convenient to designate by an adjective..Some English writers have adopted the term esthetical. This has not however yet become an established English word..Perception in general is something very different from that peculiar and complex modification of it which takes cognizance of the beauties of poetry and art. Esthetics would naturally designate the doctrine of perception in general, and might be wanted as a technical term for that purpose. By the Kantian school, indeed, esthetic is used to denote that branch of metaphysics which contains the laws of perception..As an additional reason for hesitating before we adopt esthetic, it may be noticed that even in Germany it is not yet established beyond contest.1842 J. Gwilt Encycl. Archit. iii. i. 673 There has lately grown into use in the arts a silly pedantic term under the name of Æsthetics..it is, however, one of the metaphysical and useless additions to nomenclature in the arts, in which the German writers abound.a1856 W. Hamilton Lect. Metaphysics (1859) I. vii. 124 It is..nearly a century since Baumgarten..first applied the term Æsthetic to the doctrine which we vaguely and periphrastically denominate the Philosophy of Taste, the theory of the Fine Arts, the Science of the Beautiful..etc.,—and this term is now in general acceptation, not only in Germany, but throughout the other countries of Europe. The term Apolaustic would have been a more appropriate designation. In sense ‘cosmetic’ (see sense B. 6) after French esthétique, adjective (1888 or earlier in this sense, earliest and frequently in chirurgie esthétique). The pronunciation of the word has varied over time. The undated ninth edition by F. R. Sowerby of Walker's Pronouncing Dict. Eng. Lang. (probably published in the 1860s) gives the pronunciation /ɛsˈθɛtɪk/, which is now chiefly U.S. The pronunciation /iːsˈθɛtɪk/, recorded in modern British pronouncing dictionaries as either the only, preferred, or first listed pronunciation, appears to have been well established by the late 19th cent.; N.E.D. (1884) records it as ‘at present most common in London’. It also records the older pronunciation /ɛsˈθɛtɪk/, as well as the now obsolete /ɛsˈθiːtɪk/ and /iːsˈθiːtɪk/.
A. n.
1. Chiefly in the philosophy of Kant: the science of sensory perception. Now historical.In quot. 1764 translating an earlier use in this sense by Baumgarten's disciple G. F. Meier, following similar use by Baumgarten (see the main etymology).
ΚΠ
1764 tr. G. F. Meier Merry Philosopher Introd. 12 The Æsthetic [Ger. Die Aesthetic] is a Science, which in general treats of our sensitive Knowledge, and of the Expression of that Knowledge.
1797 tr. J. S. Beck Princ. Crit. Philos. i. ii. 73 The transcendental philosophy of the critic is divided into two enquiries, into the transcendental aesthetic and the transcendental logic.
1875 Encycl. Brit. I. 212/1 Kant..under the title Transcendental Æsthetic, treats of the a priori principles of all sensuous knowledge.
1908 J. Watson Philos. Kant Explained 100 Change cannot be put among the data of Transcendental Aesthetic.
2000 J. C. McKusick Green Writing v. 134 Coleridge revised Kant's doctrine of time and space (the ‘transcendental aesthetic’) by pointing out that even these supposedly immediate intuitions are actually constituted by the structure of language.
2.
a. = aesthetics n. 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > aesthetics > [noun]
aesthetics1770
aesthetic1798
1798 A. F. M. Willich Elements Crit. Philos. 139 Aesthetic commonly signifies the Critique of Taste, but with Kant, the science containing the rules of sensation.
1822 New Monthly Mag. 4 149 He accordingly applied himself diligently to study the spirit of classical Tragedy, and the principles of Æsthetic.
1857 T. E. Webb Intellectualism of Locke v. 84 The two propositions which constitute the Æsthetic of the Essay.
1864 Press 21 May 481 Certes, we English are behind hand in æsthetic.
1868 M. Pattison Suggestions Acad. Organisation §5. 196 Two professors of the science [of art] and æsthetic, dealing with Painting, Sculpture, etc.
1934 E. Pound Cavalcanti in Make it New vii. 373 The aesthetic of the carry-through of one rhyme scheme from strophe to strophe is of Provençal not of Tuscan composition.
1989 M. Stewart Martha Stewart's Christmas vii. 87/1 When I decided to create this year's holiday decor without relying on the red and green theme that has dominated our Christmas aesthetic, I thought it would be interesting to try gilding a few decorations.
2005 C. Tudge Secret Life Trees vii. 155 Bamboos..have created an entire aesthetic of painting and architecture—the swishy calligraphy, the great sagging roofs of palaces and temples.
b. = aesthetics n. 1b.machine aesthetic: see machine n. Compounds 1a(b).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > aesthetic quality or good taste > [noun] > pleasantness to the aesthetic sense
sweetnessa1568
harmony1650
sweetness and light1867
aesthetic1926
1926 H. O. Osgood So this is Jazz xiii. 150 [The spats'] value in adding to the aesthetic of the foot-tapping mentioned by Mr. Downes is indisputable.
1988 Architects' Jrnl. 20 Jan. 25/3 The overall aesthetic of the completed space is no more ‘hairy’ than it is ‘wacky’ or ‘cranky’.
1994 Architect's Jrnl. 19 Jan. 27/1 The neo-Classical aesthetic of the building.
2009 Herald-Times (Bloomington, Indiana) 31 Oct. d5/1 To increase the value, functionality and aesthetic of an otherwise defunct piece of furniture.
3. With the. That which is aesthetic.
ΚΠ
1838 Musical World 12 Jan. 35 The Germans search so profoundly into the depths of the art, that they end by completely losing themselves in the labyrinth of the esthetic.
1876 Mind 1 184 Mr. Sidgwick seems to think that when they are different in kind, as in comparing the sensual, the aesthetic, and the intellectual, our faculty of discrimination and valuation is non-plussed.
1921 M. Cram in B. Williams O. Henry Prize Stories of 1921 (1922) 139 Grimshaw—the exquisite futurist, the daffodil, apostle of the aesthetic!
1955 S. Spender Making of Poem i. 16 Architecture..expresses the tension of the aesthetic against the useful. At the other extreme, music is completely unutilitarian.
1991 Oxf. Art Jrnl. 14 i. 97/2 Here I suspect lies also his ultimate discomfort with Modernism—prone as it is to slip the leash of a guiding politics and dance under the less biddable star of the Aesthetic.
4. An adherent of the Aesthetic Movement (see sense B. 3); = aesthete n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > aesthetics > [noun] > adherent of
aesthetic1879
1879 Sylvia's Home Jrnl. Christmas No. 421/1 The tenet, almost the creed, of the aesthetics to allow no atom of beauty to pass unloved.
1881 W. S. Gilbert Patience i. 11 The peripatetics Of long haired aesthetics, Are very much more to their taste.
1894 Cosmopolitan May 122 The æsthetics..who proclaim the infinite superiority of art to nature.
1946 Eng. Stud. 27 49 It is not unsympathetic to the Aesthetics, for it seeks to understand them.
1980 Atlantic Monthly Mar. 49 Eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Western aesthetics were excessively literary.
B. adj.
1. Of or relating to perception by the senses; received by the senses. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > [adjective] > of or relating to physical sensation
animala1400
sensible?a1425
sensualc1429
sensitive1502
sensate1677
sensatory1720
sensorial1742
aesthetic1798
sensational1807
sensatorial1847
perceptual1878
psychosensory1881
aesthesic1898
1798 W. Taylor in Monthly Rev. 25 585 In the dialect peculiar to Professor Kant..his receptivity for aesthetic gratification [is] not delicate.
1827 T. Carlyle State Germ. Lit. in Edinb. Rev. Oct. 325 The aesthetic theories of Kant, Herder, Schiller, Goethe, Richter, vary in external aspect.
2. Of or relating to the perception, appreciation, or criticism of that which is beautiful.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > [adjective]
curiousc1380
tasted?1802
aesthetic1812
theoretic1846
well-tasted1911
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > aesthetics > [adjective]
aesthetical1797
aesthetic1812
beautiful1814
1812 Monthly Mag. Apr. 223/2 I never in the least suspected that there could exist any æsthetic point of contact between us. I was therefore the more surprised to find an enthusiastic lover of poetry.
1821 S. T. Coleridge in Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. 10 254 I wish I could find a more familiar word than æsthetic, for works of taste and criticism.
1855 A. Bain Senses & Intellect ii. iv. 607 The first object of an artist is to gratify the feelings of taste, or the proper æsthetic emotions.
1872 H. Spencer Princ. Psychol. (ed. 2) II. viii. ix. 627 The æsthetic sentiments originate from the play-impulse.
1872 H. Spencer Princ. Psychol. (ed. 2) II. viii. ix. 632 The æsthetic character of a feeling is habitually associated with separateness from life-serving function.
1908 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Green Gables xvi. 168 ‘Messy things,’ said Marilla, whose æsthetic sense was not noticeably developed. ‘You clutter up your room entirely too much with out-of-doors stuff, Anne.’
1951 R. Firth Elements Social Organization vii. 221 It does this..by response to the aesthetic qualities of the word-patterning and imagery used.
1972 R. Perry Fall Guy v. 86 The furniture wasn't out of Ideal Home..affording me no aesthetic pleasure whatsoever.
1990 Times Educ. Suppl. 1 June b25/2 Teaching pupils to formulate design proposals, to apply aesthetic judgements.
2008 D. Lodge Deaf Sentence (2009) xii. 166 I might accept the socio-political case for colour-blind casting..if its proponents would admit that it often carries a certain aesthetic price.
3. Designating, of, or relating to a movement advocating a doctrine of ‘art for art's sake’, spec. any one of a school of artists and writers in England in the late 19th cent. Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > aesthetics > [adjective] > of or relating to particular branches, groups, or doctrines
aesthetic1830
perspectivistic1937
1830 S. Beazley Oxonians I. Intro. p. ix What would this lady have said to the Esthetic school of Germany, which openly professes that ‘pleasure, not instruction, is the legitimate business of the Muses’.
1838 Gentleman's Mag. Aug. 120/1 He [sc. Carl Theodor Körner] published a volume of poems entitled ‘Blossoms’..; became a member of an Æsthetic society (a term invented by Baumgarten, and meaning ‘the philosophy of beauty’).
1868 W. Pater Æsthetic Poetry in Appreciations (1889) 213 The ‘æsthetic’ poetry is neither a mere reproduction of Greek or medieval poetry, nor only an idealisation of modern life and sentiment.
1877 Cornhill Mag. Oct. 461 ‘Art at home’ is the watchword of the rising æsthetic school.
a1882 D. G. Rossetti St. Agnes in Coll. Wks. (1886) I. 410 The journal of the worthy poet-critic..was much too æsthetic to permit itself many readers.
1882 W. Hamilton Aesthetic Movement 31 The leaders of the Æsthetic School in poetry have been styled fleshly poets, delighting in somewhat sensually-suggestive descriptions of the passions.
1908 Times 15 June 5/6 Later on there is no doubt the Aesthetic movement with its plagiarization of the style of the new Renaissance did good in its way.
1943 J. Laver Fashion & Fashion Plates 1800–1900 20 The Æsthetic dress for women was loose and flowing with a preference for pale pastel shades, especially for that ‘greenery-yallery’ shade which gave the movement its name among the profane.
1950 E. H. Gombrich Story of Art xxv. 402 Whistler became a leading figure in the so-called ‘aesthetic movement’ which tried to make out that artistic sensibility is the only thing in life worth taking seriously.
1992 N.Y. Times Mag. 11 Oct. ii. 46/3 Patterned Kuba cloth..was used to re-cover four ebonized-cherry Aesthetic chairs, circa 1875, whose original fabrics—a hand-embroidered silk with stylized poppies and a patchwork floral print—had disintegrated.
4. Of a thing: in accordance with principles of artistic beauty or taste; giving or designed to give pleasure through beauty; of pleasing appearance.
ΚΠ
1833 New-Eng. Mag. May 364 Esthetic gardening is as yet but little cultivated.
1855 Musical World 21 Apr. 181/1 We had just completed a not very æsthetic quantity of boned turkey.
1862 Life amongst Colliers iv. 83 I heard an exquisite ask a lady ‘if she snored?’ She..said, ‘No, I do not.’ ‘I am glad to hear it—it is not a very æsthetic process.’
1881 G. D. Leslie Our River ii. 31 The little coffee-room, too, had been papered fresh with a modern æsthetic wall-paper—the steady march of culture and taste is so fast and unflinching everywhere!
1921 F. S. Mathews Field Bk. Wild Birds & their Music (rev. ed.) 280 Two distinct white wing-bars and a very æsthetic peach-blow pink breast.
1938 Amer. Home Jan. 21/2 The days when grandmamma put a million photographs on the wall in close array and thought the result aesthetic.
1974 Encycl. Brit. Macropædia IV. 1078/1 A light and aesthetic roof capable of bridging wide spaces without appreciable bending.
2006 New Yorker 29 May 44/1 Anna's palace was the world's first piece of purely aesthetic ice architecture.
5. Of a person, etc.: having or showing an appreciation of the beautiful or pleasing; tasteful, of refined taste. Hence: being or resembling an aesthete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > good taste > refinement > [adjective]
polisheda1382
dainteousc1386
polite?a1500
delicatea1533
courtly1535
civil1551
court-like1552
well-refined1575
nice1588
perpolite1592
politic1596
soft1599
terse1628
refine1646
refined1650
elegant1652
genteel1678
chastea1797
spirituala1806
aesthetic1844
nicey1859
raffiné1865
nuttish1869
too-tooa1884
sophisticated1895
lavender1928
1844 A. H. Clough Let. 25 June in Notes & Queries (1967) Oct. 380 He is highly aesthetic, but not very genial.
1860 R. H. Hutton in W. C. Roscoe Poems & Ess. I. Mem. Author p. xxii. My first impression of him at college was of a purely æsthetic man.
1861 Jrnl. Hort., Cottage Gardener, & Country Gentleman 3 Sept. 446/1 There is considerable space to cover, and a proportionate margin for taste, in shape and colour; it will require a very æsthetic butler to arrange these glasses at once.
1871 C. Darwin Descent of Man II. xiii. 39 Birds appear to be the most æsthetic of all animals, excepting of course, man, and they have nearly the same taste for the beautiful as we have.
1881 W. S. Gilbert Patience i. 22 I am a broken-hearted troubadour, Whose mind's æsthetic, and whose tastes are pure.
1914 W. Lewis in New Weekly 20 June 13/2 A friend of mine had told me how a dozen aesthetic young men of 1900 would go along a certain towpath to admire the beauty of some neighbouring gasworks.
1945 I. Gershwin Alessandro the Wise (song) in Lyrics on Several Occasions (1959) 334 Refrain. I'm aesthetic, poetic; To beauty I'm sympathetic. Soldiers. A patron of the arts is Alessandro.
1956 Sci. News Let. 12 May 297/3 An aesthetic conquistador,..who, plucking the bright orange flowers in the Mexican countryside, decided to take a plant back to his native Spain.
1977 O. Manning Danger Tree ii. 69 He had a thin, almost aesthetic, face.
2006 N.Y. Mag. 14 Aug. 27/2 Giving Brooklyn a new architectural icon was on the agenda as well..so he turned to Gehry..who would appeal to Brooklyn's growing aesthetic class.
6. Designating surgery or dentistry intended to restore or improve a person's appearance; of or relating to such treatment. Cf. cosmetic adj. 1b.
ΚΠ
1856 Dental News Let. Oct. 56 This branch of the profession, which may be called æsthetic dentistry, is not limited to the mere adaptation of the artificial denture to the mouth and face, but extends its relations to the organism as a whole.
1890 Maryland Med. Jrnl. 21 Dec. 157/2 The object of this little pamphlet is to advise surgeons not to let ugly and deformed noses alone, but to practise æsthetic surgery and study the best operation for correcting these deformities.
1919 Lancet 16 Aug. 297/1 Æsthetic surgery, or, as you call it, cosmetic surgery, continues to develop its territory.
1974 Plastic & Reconstructive Surg. 54 389/2 The esthetic surgeon is and must be a plastic surgeon.
1986 N.Y. Mag. 9 June 49/1 Breast-augmentation is the most popular aesthetic procedure in the country.
2003 G. A. Bertoli et al. in M. Fabiani Surg. for Snoring & Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome 533 Before performing this cosmetic procedure, the surgeon must consider..the physiological effects following aesthetic rhinoplasty on a normal functioning nose.

Compounds

aesthetic distance n. a sense or degree of emotional detachment considered integral to (and necessary for) dispassionate appreciation of the creative arts; see also psychical distance n. at psychical adj. Compounds.Some artists (esp. dramatists) have proposed methods designed to engender aesthetic distance in the viewer: see alienation effect at alienation n. 1c.
ΚΠ
1911 Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 8 306 While teaching to regard objects in themselves, apart from their practical use, art creates ‘esthetic distance’.
1948 Poetry Dec. 155 The direct approach is perilous to the artist... An art is usually..a kind of obliquity... Its fixed form proposes to guarantee the round-about of the artistic process, and the ‘aesthetic distance’.
1960 K. Beckson & A. Ganz Reader's Guide Lit. Terms (1961) 11 This necessary separation between the observer and the work is called ‘psychic’ or, especially by the New Critics, ‘aesthetic distance.’
1991 J. A. Cuddon Dict. Lit. Terms & Lit. Theory (ed. 3) 11 In his [sc. Hans Robert Jauss] theory literary value is measured according to ‘aesthetic distance’, the degree to which a work departs from the ‘horizon of expectations’ of its first readers.
2007 Contemp. Sociol. 36 223/1 The idea of aesthetic distance in the theatre explains how we are drawn in emotionally to situations we know are unreal.
aesthetic-looking adj. attractive, of pleasing appearance; (also) resembling an aesthete.
ΚΠ
1876 Sat. Rev. 15 Apr. 485/1 Having collected all these useful hints, they turn to an aesthetic-looking volume with a fascinating label in white paper.
1939 H. Miller Cosmological Eye 21 The door opens and a pale, aesthetic-looking young Englishman enters.
2008 Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. (Nexis) 28 Sept. b3 Not just any walls, but walls with aesthetic-looking architectural facades.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.adj.1764
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