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A philosopher who specializes in the nature of beauty
Answer for the clue "A philosopher who specializes in the nature of beauty ", 12 letters:
aesthetician
Word definitions for aesthetician in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a worker skilled in giving beauty treatments (manicures and facials etc.) [syn: esthetician ] a philosopher who specializes in the nature of beauty [syn: esthetician ]
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
alt. 1 One who studies aesthetics; a student of art or beauty. 2 A beautician; somebody employed to provide beauty treatments such as manicures and facials. n. 1 One who studies aesthetics; a student of art or beauty. 2 A beautician; somebody employed to ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Aesthetician may refer to: A specialist in philosophical aesthetics List of aestheticians Esthetician , a cosmetologist who specializes in the study of skin care
Usage examples of aesthetician.
Our nihilistic aesthetician is right when he says: a real apple is more beautiful than a painted one, and a living woman is more beautiful than a Venus of stone.
Tereza reads the same events as an aesthetician obsessed with the search for form.
Get an aesthetician to do it the first time for you and then keep the new shape clean by tweezing.
She was immediately greeted by a zealous aesthetician with jet-black hair and lots of makeup, whom Nadine guessed to be in her late forties.
Dino belongs, then, neither to dialectical History with its ever-evolving fashions, nor to the Eternity that idealist aestheticians imagine to transcend mere fashion.
Within a few generations, he had explained to Rudgutter, the Weavers evolved from virtually mindless predators into aestheticians of astonishing intellectual and materio-thaumaturgic power, superintelligent alien minds who no longer used their webs to catch prey, but were attuned to them as objects of beauty disentanglable from the fabric of reality itself.
Deceived by the uniqueness of the name, aestheticians have tried to make us believe that there is a single painter-psychology, a single function of painting, a single standard of criticism.
It is no good for the aestheticians to say that you ought not to be moved by a picture or a symphony because it fills you with erotic excitement or melts you to tears by reminding you of some longforgotten scene, or through its associations exalts you to mystic rapture.
According to some Aestheticians the indefinable emotions we sometimes feel when listening to music are the reverberations of feelings experienced countless ages ago.