What about enthusiasm? A rehabilitation : Pentecost, Pygmalion, Pathosformel

Bibliographic Information

What about enthusiasm? A rehabilitation : Pentecost, Pygmalion, Pathosformel

Barbara Baert

(Studies in iconology, 13)

Peeters, 2019

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What about enthusiasm? : A rehabilitation

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Note

Bibliography: p. [123]-134

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The word enthusiasm is derived from the Greek enthousiasmos and means being captivated by a god. Even today, we use `enthusiasm' to describe a special energy that can suddenly overwhelm us: an emotional affect that holds the glow for the subject within oneself, and which radiates inspiration out to an audience. Yet, through the ages, the concept has not always carried with it the positive connotations it had in ancient Greece. Despite a few flickers on the cultural historical time line, enthusiasm has mostly been marginalised in modern Western philosophy: as an excessive urge or as a harmful exaggeration of emotions. In this essay, I work towards a rehabilitation of inspiration within intellectual thought. Is enthousiasmos the subject of any iconographic traditions? Is enthousiasmos also an aesthetic concept? And can enthousiasmos be part of an epistemology?

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