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flights of science. By looking into physical causes, our minds are opened and enlarged; and in this pursuit,whether we take or whether we lose our game, the chace is certainly of service. Cicero, true as he was to the Academic philosophy, and consequently led to reject the certainty of physical, as of every other kind of knowledge, yet freely confesses its great importance to the human underftanding: "Est animorum ingeniorumque "nostrorum naturale quoddam quasi pa"bulum consideratio contemplatioque "naturæ." If we can direct the lights we derive from such exalted speculations, upon the humbler field of the imagination, whilst

investigate the springs, and trace the courses of our passions, we may not only communicate to the taste a fort of philosophical solidity, but we may reflect back on the severer sciences some of the graces and elegancies of taste, without which the greatest proficiency in those sciences will always have the appearance of something illiberal.

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SECT. I. Novelty

4I

SECT. II. Pain and Pleasure 43
SE C T. III. The difference between
the removal of Pain and positive Plea-
fure
SECT. IV. Of Delight and Pleasure,

as opposed to each other

SECT. V. Joy and Grief

47

51

54

SECT. VI. Of the Paffions which

belong to Self-preservation

SEC T. VII. Of the Sublime

57

58

SECT. VIII. Of the Paffions which

belong to fociety

60

SECT.

SE C T. IX.

The final caufe of the

difference between the paffions be-
longing to Self-prefervation, and those
which regard the Society of the Sexes

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SE CT. XIV.

The effects of Sym-

pathy in the diftreffes of others

SE CT. XV. Of the effects of Tragedy

SECT. XVI. Imitation

72

75

79

SECT. XVII.

Ambition

82

SE C T. XVIII. Recapitulation 84
SECT. XIX. The Conclufion 87

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SE C T. IV. Of the difference between

Clearnefs and Obfcurity with regard to
the Paffions

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SECT. [IV.] The fame fubject con-

tinued

102

SECT.

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mity

132

SECT. X. Magnitude in Building 136
SECT. XI. Infinity in pleafing Ob-

jects

SÉC T. XII. Difficulty

SECT. XIII. Magnificence

SECT. XIV.

Light

138

139

140

144

SECT. XV. Light in Building 147

SE C T. XVI. Colour confidered as

productive of the Sublime

149

SECT. XVII. Sound and Loudness

150

SECT. XVIII. Suddenness

152

SECT. XIX. Intermitting

153

SECT. XX. The Cries of animals 155

SEC T. XXI. Smell and Tafte. Bit-
ters and Stenches

156

SEC T. XXII. Feeling. Pain 159

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SECT. IV. Proportion not the cause
of Beauty in the human fpecies 174
SECT. V. Proportion further confi-

dered

186

SECT. VI. Fitnefs not the cause of

191.

Beauty
SECT, VII. The real effects of Fit-
nefs

197

SEC T. VIII. The Recapitulation 202
SECT. IX. Perfection not the cause
of Beauty
203
SECT. X. How far the ideas of Beauty
may be applied to the qualities of the
Mind
205
SE CT. XI. How far the ideas of

Beauty may be applied to Virtue 208
SE C T. XII. The real caufe of Beauty

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