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    Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays

    Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays

    by Frederick Schiller


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      BN ID: 2940000745014
    • Publisher: B&R Samizdat Express
    • Publication date: 09/01/2009
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • File size: 925 KB

    Frederick Schiller

    Table of Contents

    Introduction5
    Letters on the AEsthetical Education of Man33
    AEsthetical Essays
    The Moral Utility of AEsthetic Manners126
    On the Sublime135
    The Pathetic149
    On Grace and Dignity175
    On Dignity211
    On the necessary Limitations in the Use of Beauty and Form230
    Reflections on the Use of the Vulgar and Low Elements in Works of Art254
    Detached Reflections on Different Questions of AEsthetics261
    On Simple and Sentimental Poetry269
    The Stage as a Moral Institution339
    On the Tragic Art346
    Of the Cause of the Pleasure we derive from Tragic Objects367
    Schiller's Philosophical Letters
    Prefatory Remarks379
    Theosophy of Julius387
    On the Connection between the Animal and the Spiritual Nature in Man406
    Physical Connection408
    Philosophical Connection415

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    Friedrich von Schiller (1759-1805) was a leading German poet, and a philosopher of freedom. Schiller's work exemplifies the highest standards of ethics and the ideal of the truly educated, multilingual citizen of the world.

    Schiller devoted himself not only to self-determination and freedom but also to the brotherhood of all people. The French Revolution borrowed many of Schiller's ideas for its declarations of freedom. Schiller was then made an honorary citizen of France.

    His first drama, Die Rauber, was published in 1781. It was performed the next year and its revolutionary appeal gained immediate success. Among Schiller's best-known works is An Die Freude, (Ode to Joy), later set to music by Ludwig van Beethoven in his Choral Symphony. The dramatic trilogy Wallenstein (1796-99) was set in the tumultuous period of the Thirty Years War. The historical drama Maria Stuart (1800) was about Queen Elizabeth I of England and the last days of Mary Queen of Scots, when she was held captive in the Castle of Fothernghay. In Wilhelm Tell (1803), about the Swiss hero of that name, Schiller paid tribute the dignity of men living close to nature. - "The mountain cannot frighten one who was born on it."

    In 1791 he was forced to give up his professional duties because of illness. In the 1790s Schiller wrote philosophical poems and studies about philosophy and aesthetics. He assisted Goethe in Weimar in the direction of the Court Theater by adapting many plays for that stage. Schiller died on May 9, 1805, at the age of 46 in Weimar.

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