
Theory of Colours
by Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von; Eastlake, Charles Lock-
We Buy This Book Back!
Buy New
Rent Book
Used Book
We're Sorry
Sold Out
eBook
We're Sorry
Not Available
How Marketplace Works:
- This item is offered by an independent seller and not shipped from our warehouse
- Item details like edition and cover design may differ from our description; see seller's comments before ordering.
- Sellers much confirm and ship within two business days; otherwise, the order will be cancelled and refunded.
- Marketplace purchases cannot be returned to eCampus.com. Contact the seller directly for inquiries; if no response within two days, contact customer service.
- Additional shipping costs apply to Marketplace purchases. Review shipping costs at checkout.
Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Introduction | p. v |
Translator's Preface | p. xxvii |
Preface to the First Edition of 1810 | p. xxxvii |
Introduction | p. li |
Physiological Colours | |
Effects of Light and Darkness on the Eye | p. 2 |
Effects of Black and White Objects on the Eye | p. 5 |
Grey Surfaces and Objects | p. 14 |
Dazzling Colourless Objects | p. 16 |
Coloured Objects | p. 20 |
Coloured Shadows | p. 29 |
Faint Lights | p. 38 |
Subjective Halos | p. 40 |
Pathological Colours--Appendix | p. 45 |
Physical Colours | |
Dioptrical Colours | p. 59 |
Dioptrical Colours of the First Class | p. 60 |
Dioptrical Colours of the Second Class--Refraction | p. 74 |
Subjective Experiments | p. 80 |
Refraction without the Appearance of Colour | p. ib |
Conditions of the Appearance of Colour | p. 81 |
Conditions under which the Appearance of Colour increases | p. 86 |
Explanation of the foregoing Phenomena | p. 90 |
Decrease of the Appearance of Colour | p. 100 |
Grey Objects Displayed by Refraction | p. 103 |
Coloured Objects Displaced by Refraction | p. 106 |
Achromatism and Hyperchromatism | p. 118 |
Advantages of Subjective Experiments--Transition to the Objective | p. 123 |
Objective Experiments | p. 125 |
Refraction without the Appearance of Colour | p. 127 |
Conditions of the Appearance of Colour | p. 128 |
Conditions of the Increase of Colour | p. 134 |
Explanation of the foregoing Phenomena | p. 139 |
Decrease of the Appearance of Colour | p. 141 |
Grey Objects | p. 142 |
Coloured Objects | p. 143 |
Achromatism and Hyperchromatism | |
Combination of Subjective and Objective Experiments | p. 147 |
Transition | p. 150 |
Catoprical Colours | p. 154 |
Paroptical Colours | p. 163 |
Epoptical Colours | p. 177 |
Chemical Colours | |
Chemical Contrast | p. 202 |
White | p. 203 |
Black | p. 205 |
First Excitation of Colour | p. 206 |
Augmentation of Colour | p. 212 |
Culmination | p. 214 |
Fluctuation | p. 217 |
Passage through the Whole Scale | p. 218 |
Inversion | p. 220 |
Fixation | p. 221 |
Intermixture, Real | p. 223 |
Intermixture, Apparent | p. 226 |
Communication, Actual | p. 230 |
Communication, Apparent | p. 235 |
Extraction | p. 237 |
Nomenclature | p. 242 |
Minerals | p. 245 |
Plants | p. 247 |
Worms, Insects, Fishes | p. 252 |
Birds | p. 259 |
Mammalia and Human Beings | p. 262 |
Physical and Chemical Effects of the Transmission of Light through Coloured Mediums | p. 266 |
Chemical Effect in Dioptrical Achromatism | p. 270 |
General Characteristics | |
The Facility with which Colour appears | p. 274 |
The Definite Nature of Colour | p. 276 |
Combination of the Two Principles | p. 277 |
Augmentation to Red | p. ib |
Junction of the Two Augmented Extremes | p. 278 |
Completeness the Result of Variety in Colour | p. 279 |
Harmony of the Complete State | p. 280 |
Facility with which Colour may be made to rend either to the plus or minus side | p. 281 |
Evanescence of Colour | p. ib |
Permanence of Colour | p. 282 |
Relation to Other Pursuits | |
Relation to Philosophy | p. 283 |
Relation to Mathematics | p. 286 |
Relation to the Technical Operations of the Dyer | p. 289 |
Relation to Physiology and Pathology | p. 291 |
Relation to Natural History | p. 292 |
Relation to General Physics | p. 293 |
Relation to the Theory of Music | p. 298 |
Concluding Observations on Terminology | p. 300 |
Effect of Colour with Reference to Moral Associations | |
Yellow | p. 306 |
Red-Yellow | p. 308 |
Yellow-Red | p. 309 |
Blue | p. 310 |
Red-Blue | p. 312 |
Blue-Red | p. 313 |
Red | p. ib |
Green | p. 316 |
Completeness and Harmony | p. ib |
Characteristic Combinations | p. 321 |
Yellow and Blue | p. 322 |
Yellow and Red | p. ib |
Blue and Red | p. ib |
Yellow-Red and Blue-Red | p. 323 |
Combination Non-Characteristic | p. 324 |
Relation of the Combinatons to Light and Dark | p. 325 |
Considerations derived from the Evidence of Experience and History | p. 326 |
Aesthetic Influence | p. 326 |
Chiaro-Scuro | p. 331 |
Tendency to Colour | p. 334 |
Keeping | p. 335 |
Colouring | p. 337 |
Colour in General Nature | p. ib |
Colour of Particular Objects | p. 338 |
Characteristic Colouring | p. 339 |
Harmonius Colouring | p. 341 |
Genuine Tone | p. 342 |
False Tone | p. ib |
Weak Colouring | p. 343 |
The Motley | p. 344 |
Dread of Theory | p. ib |
Ultimate Aim | p. 345 |
Grounds | p. ib |
Pigments | p. 348 |
Allegorical, Symbolical, Mystical Application of Colour | p. 350 |
Concluding Observations | p. 352 |
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.
This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.
By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.
Digital License
You are licensing a digital product for a set duration. Durations are set forth in the product description, with "Lifetime" typically meaning five (5) years of online access and permanent download to a supported device. All licenses are non-transferable.
More details can be found here.
A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.
Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.
Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.