User:Danusyastrans/Harmony

Harmony (Ancient Greek: ἁρμονία, Latin: harmonia, as well as Latin: coaptatio, convenientia, etc. translations) in philosophy - coordination of heterogeneous and even opposite (conflict) elements, in aesthetics - coherence of the whole, born from a combination of opposite in quality entities (for example, in music - consonance and dissonance)..

Краткая характеристика
В философии гармония — категория, которая отражает естественный характер развития действительности, внутреннюю и внешнюю согласованность, цельность и соразмерность содержания и формы. В эстетике гармонии одна из форм совершенна, понятие, которое означает порядок многообразия, цельность, последовательность частей и устойчивость их напряжения. Слово "гармония" встречается в гомеровских "Илиаде" и "Одиссее". The philosophical interpretation of harmony (without the word "harmony") in the Greeks was first observed in Heraclitus (the first half of the V century BC).): Syllables: voiced and unvoiced [the letters], agree discorded, consonant nasosnoe, all is one, one is all.

— Heraclitus. About the nature The author of the treatise "On the world", known as Pseudo-Aristotle (I century BC), based on Heraclitus, found the agreement of opposites in all natural entities, in the activities (occupations, "art") of man and in the Universe:

 In Latin science, the same definition is first recorded in Boethius ' Arithmetic (C. 500).):



Everything is composed of opposites, connected by a certain harmony and folded with it, because harmony is the Union of lot and the discorded harmony (lat. Est enim armonia

plurimorum adunatio et dissentientium consensio).— Boeth. Arithm. II, 32 Classic literature harmony (without the words) was described as a concordia discors (literally "discorded agreement") Horace ("Messages", 23-20 BCE) and Lucan (Civil war, 48-65 BC):

 Cum tu inter scabiem tantam et contagia lucriNil parvum sapias et adhuc sublimia cures:Quae mare conpescant causae, quid temperet annum,Stellae sponte sua iussaene vagentur et errent,Quid premat obscurum lunae, quid proferat orbem,Quid velit et possit rerum concordia discors,Empedocles an Stertinium deliret acumen.— Horat. Epist. I,12