What shall our pleasures be
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Introduction: Pleasure does not consist in doing just what one likes or pleases, that is a mere determination of the will. But it is rather a kind of feeling which stimulates the will to action tending to sustain or produce it, to sustain is actually present and produce it if represented in idea. It is that which is pleasing to the intellect or the senses. It cannot be obtained by simply making it the only end and aim for performing some act, as the pleasurers of merely animal life are obtained only on condition of not being sought directly and so it is with the pleasurers of thought and study they can be enjoyed only in the highest degree by those who have an ardor of curiosity so as to carry the mind temporarily away from self and it’s sensations. In art we must forget the creative faculty if we want the intense and exquisite pleasure of imagination.
Description
Morse Department of Special Collections