æsthetics

See also: aesthetics

English

Noun

æsthetics (usually uncountable, plural æsthetics)

  1. Alternative spelling of aesthetics.
    • 1997, Barbara T. Cooper, Mary Donaldson-Evans, editors, Moving Forward, Holding Fast: The Dynamics of Nineteenth-Century French Culture, Rodopi, →ISBN, page 219:
      Physiological æsthetics purported to measure and analyze the impact of form, movement and color not only on the eye but on the body.
    • 2001, Mary Lawrence Test, Dalhousie French Studies, volume 54, “Dominique Desanti: Un Hommage”, page 111 (Department of French, Dalhousie University):
      Psychoanalysis, one of the most sophisticated and comprehensive models ever offered in the fields of cognition (epistemology), affect (emotion system), action and motivation (pragmatics) and æsthetics, may very well be the last creation of “modernism.”
    • 2010 winter, “[Lecture #1 - Welcome to CS193P] Assignment 1A - Hello Stanford!”, in CS 193P iPhone Application Development[1], Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University, archived from the original on 25 June 2014, page 2:
      Æsthetics matter: a particularly attractive, innovative, or clever design of the interface is always appreciated.
    • 2024 July 21, Elon Musk (@elonmusk), X[2], archived from the original on 29 December 2024:
      æsthetics matter / there should be / a beauty to the flow / of thought on 𝕏