<p>PREFACE</p><p>This little work contains the chief ideas gathered together for a course of lectures on the theory and history of aesthetics given at Harvard College from 1892 to 1895. The only originality I can claim is that which may result from the attempt to put together the scattered commonplaces of criticism into a system under the inspiration of a naturalistic psychology. I have studied sincerity rather than novelty and if any subject as for instance the excellence of tragedy is presented in a new light the change consists only in the stricter application to a complex subject of the principles acknowledged to obtain in our simple judgments. My effort throughout has been to recall those fundamental aesthetic feelings the orderly extension of which yields sanity of judgment and distinction of taste.</p><p>The influences under which the book has been written are rather too general and pervasive to admit of specification; yet the student of philosophy will not fail to perceive how much I owe to writers both living and dead to whom no honour could be added by my acknowledgments. I have usually omitted any reference to them in foot-notes or in the text in order that the air of controversy might be avoided and the reader might be enabled to compare what is said more directly with the reality of his own experience.</p><p><br></p><p>G. S.</p><p>September 1906</p><p><br></p>
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