For the Grace of God

Father, thank You for making me alive in Christ! I declare that Jesus is my Lord and Saviour, and because He died for me, I can live the abundant life here on earth. Help me stay focused on You this day & live with the enthusiasm that comes from knowing You in Jesus’ name, Amen.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

This ia a wordy endeavour

Saturday, 06 April 2013

aesthetician

“The first duty then of the ‘aesthetician’ is to find a definition of art which shall include all its manifestations.”
—Albert Shaw, editor, Review of Reviews and World’s Work, Volume 4 (1892)
“In contrast to Kant, both the neoclassical aestheticians and Coleridge were disinclined to grant art an autonomous realm in which it would be equally emancipated from the dictates of Understanding and from a burdensome and pretentious kinship with Reason.”
— Sanja Šoštarić, Coleridge and Emerson: A Complex Affinity (2003
Read more at http://hotword.dictionary.com/aesthetician/#bCESPrSxRXaoIfpc.99

Lexical Investigations: Aesthetician
Aesthetician, Samuel Taylor ColeridgeAesthetician
If you’re not sure which spelling is correct, aesthetician or esthetician, you might be surprised that neither is the original. The word aesthetic became commonly known among English speakers in the 1830s, when translators including Samuel Taylor Coleridge and movements such as transcendentalism popularized German philosophy.Æsthetics, spelled with the joined character “æ” known as a ligature, had been written about extensively by German philosophers like Immanuel Kant and Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten, the latter of whom wrote Æsthetica from 1750-1758. In the mid-nineteenth century, two spellings in English emerged, neither containing the ligature: “aesthetics” and “esthetics.” Though the two letters “ae” together visually resemble “æ,” some linguists consider the single “e” the more accurate alternative. Many words which used to contain an “æ” have over time adopted one or the other simplified spelling. aesthetician and esthetician are interesting because both versions have persisted.
Whom should you visit for a beauty consultation, an aesthetician or an esthetician? That all depends on the type of advice and skills you seek. Typically, an aesthetician (with an “a”) studies aesthetics as an academic discipline, which is the study of beauty and art in philosophical, sociological, and historical contexts. An esthetician (without the “a”) is more likely to be someone trained in cosmetology, skin care, and other beautifying treatments. However, either spelling can be used for either occupation.
Scholars of aesthetics are quick to point out that beauty and art are not one and the same: beauty can be found outside of art, and art does not have to beautiful. Hopefully the esthetician who treats your skin shares your idea of beauty.
Related Quotations:
“The first duty then of the ‘aesthetician’ is to find a definition of art which shall include all its manifestations.”
—Albert Shaw, editor, Review of Reviews and World’s Work, Volume 4 (1892)
“In contrast to Kant, both the neoclassical aestheticians and Coleridge were disinclined to grant art an autonomous realm in which it would be equally emancipated from the dictates of Understanding and from a burdensome and pretentious kinship with Reason.”
— Sanja Šoštarić, Coleridge and Emerson: A Complex Affinity (2003
“In the basics of skincare and makeup application, Michele’s job is similar to that of most other aestheticians.”
—Kathleen Green, You’re a what? Medical aesthetician.” Occupational Outlook Quarterly, Spring 2004 Vol. 48, Number 1. (Accessed 2011)

A motley combination of Anglo-Saxon, Latin, and Germanic dialects, the English language (more or less as we know it) coalesced between the 9th and 13th centuries. Since then, it has continued to import and borrow words and expressions from around the world, and the meanings have mutated. (Awesome and awful once meant nearly the same thing.) Some specimens in the English vocabulary have followed unusually circuitous routes to their place in the contemporary lexicon, and this series, Lexical Investigations, unpacks those words hiding in our midst.
Read our previous post in this series about the word sentimental.
Read more at http://hotword.dictionary.com/aesthetician/#tUrHYVX1Po6xGYyM.99

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