But I think both experiences of beauty are possible; intrusive beauty and hidden beauty; exoteric and esoteric.
The point I was trying to make with that song is that "ugliness" (the first minute) can exist alongside beauty (the next minute) — Noble Dust
When we look at something beautiful we also feel that the object has a purpose, eaven though we know that there is none. — UngeGosh
Beauty, on the other hand, is not morally neutral. — Noble Dust
?? I don't think about morality at all in connection with beauty. — Terrapin Station
but just because the stuff that other folks are calling "ugly" I'm not going to think is ugly if the work overall is beautiful in my view. — Terrapin Station
I agree, the ugliness can contribute to what makes a piece beautiful. They aren't necessarily so binary. — Noble Dust
Okay, so you're just telling us something about yourself and not beauty in general then? — Terrapin Station
But I'm saying it wouldn't be ugly to me in that context. — Terrapin Station
So if "the work overall is beautiful in [your] view", then the ugliness isn't ugly to you? Or what does "overall" indicate in that sentence? — Noble Dust
I suppose it wouldn't be impossible for me to think about something, "This would be beautiful if it weren't for such and such part (which I think is ugly)," but then I'm mentally separating that part from the beautiful part. — Terrapin Station
So you don't think an ugly aspect can contribute to something's beauty? Think about Guernica. — Noble Dust
So do you think an ugly aspect of a piece can contribute to it's beauty or no? — Noble Dust
I don't know why it's so difficult to communicate this. For me, "ugly" and "beautiful" are opposites. — Terrapin Station
To me, no. — Terrapin Station
You are a musician, what you hear is the same as what I hear, but perhaps because of your training, experience, and practice you hear more than what I can hear, what you find beautiful in the music you find beautiful is more than my unsophisticated taste. That what is hidden from me is not hidden from you the sounds that entrance you may not affect me. — Cavacava
I'm not talking specifically about music, though. And I'm saying I'm as blind to the beauty in the world as anyone else, just that I've had moments where I realize how much of it I don't see, which lead me to that thought about it's hiddenness. — Noble Dust
What makes something beautiful? — River
(1)I see a beautiful person and become attracted to them.
(2)I see a beautiful architectural structure and praise its form.
(3)I see a beautiful sky and revel in its hues and clouds.
(4)I see a beautiful flower and am entranced by its colors and shape. — River
I don't think that you can be better at finding beauty through training. What you are talking about is rather appreciation for the work behind the piece, and that derives from a deep knowledge of music. I believe that beauty is something else, a more subtle quality that is there and doesn't depend on complexity. Beauty does not come with taste, and you cannot train yourself to find it, mabye to create it, but not find it. Moreover I think beauty is often confused with other feelings, for instance pleasentness or attraction.
But I dont think you have to think about the object you focus on using words, rather just taking it in and letting it affect you. — UngeGosh
Would beauty exist without us humans, or is it through our perception that things become beautiful? — UngeGosh
The thing is, whether it's music or buildings or poetry or people, is "beauty" one aspect of the whole, or is a summation of the whole?
Labour is blossoming or dancing where
The body is not bruised to pleasure soul,
Nor beauty born out of its own despair,
Nor blear-eyed wisdom out of midnight oil.
O chestnut tree, great rooted blossomer,
Are you the leaf, the blossom or the bole?
O body swayed to music, O brightening glance,
How can we know the dancer from the dance?
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