[155] Subject, i.e. conscious individual person.
[156] "Innerlichkeit," lit. "inwardness."
[157] Taken, considered as or determined to be negative.
[158] "Inward," again, does not mean merely inside our heads, but having the character of spirit in that its parts are not external to one another. A judgment is thus "inward."
[159] i.e. does not keep up a distinction between percipient and object, as between things in space. Goodness, nobleness, etc., are not felt to be other than or outside the mind.
[160] The romantic.
[161] i.e. species, modifications naturally arising out of a principle.
[162] Thus e.g. Sculpture is the art which corresponds par excellence to the general type called Classical Art; but there is a Symbolic kind of sculpture, and I suppose a Romantic or modern kind of sculpture, although neither of these types are exactly fitted to the capabilities of Sculpture.
[163] Architecture as relative to the purposes of life and of religion. See below, p. 162.
[164] "Die schöne Architectur."