My stance is one would first have to define 'art' before being able to judge its quality. — Sentient
My stance is one would first have to define 'art' before being able to judge its quality. — Sentient
To this end, it would be interesting gathering views on what 'bad art' constitutes and why. — Sentient
It's something you feel. In analytical philosophy truth is often understood to be a property of statements or sentences. Correspondence Theory uses the idea of a truth-bearer, which can be a statement or a belief. It says that a statement is true if it corresponds to a truth-maker. There is intuitive appeal to Correspondence although it quickly becomes a puzzle on closer examination. See the SEP entry: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/truthmakers/.How do you presuppose one finds 'truth' in art and in what way? — Sentient
It came to me recently because I was trying to understand something about Islam. I read three books about it and back up material to understand the books.. and one day I realized this path wasn't leading anywhere. I was on the verge of dropping it. All at once the Keats quote went through my mind. For a second I gulped because applying that idea to understanding Islam seemed like something that was way too arrogant for me. But as it settled in, I realized the truth. The answer to my question about Islam can only be answered by seeking aesthetic truth. And nobody can hand me that. I have to find it myself.How does it tie into the other disciplines you mentioned? — Sentient
To try to put it into words, I'd say it's like seeing the raw force of the universe taking shape in simplicity and elegance.
But as it settled in, I realized the truth. The answer to my question about Islam can only be answered by seeking aesthetic truth. And nobody can hand me that. I have to find it myself.
I must say this intrigues me mostly because I have no idea how you could achieve this or what it entails. Could you explain it more in depth? — Sentient
Who or what is a 'Holy person' and how can one identify them? Why? This is utterly fascinating. — Sentient
The reason I asked for clarification is not so much for an overview of the technical nature but more your own ideas. How can we tell someone is 'Holy'? The way they dress? A title? The way they live? Or the way they think/act? How do we know the 'heart' of a man? Can we ever, truly? — Sentient
If it helps, I also believe that religion is anything (or what) you can get away with; thus it's similar nature to art. ;) — Mayor of Simpleton
Why? Do you have to first define 'chair' before judging the quality of a chair? If something can count as a chair, it's a chair, and the same with art.
My stance is one would first have to define 'art' before being able to judge its quality. — Sentient
I thought you attended the church of Baseball. Ever see Bull Durham? — Mongrel
One of my favorite baseball films (a work of 'Art'), but I don't attend the church of baseball. I'm too much like Crash and think Annie is full of crap. — Mayor of Simpleton
I was attempting taking a step back and firstly deciding what even qualifies as 'a work of art' before being able to decide on its merits. — Sentient
One might with some justification suggest that creativity is an essential ingredient. And this gives rise to a problem; one cannot specify it in advance. Pirsig has much of interest to say about this. It is the nature of originality to break with tradition, to make its own rules.
But I think the problem for art at the moment is that this has been adopted as the only criterion of quality. And this means there is no way to distinguish creative genius from contrarian rubbish. Pirsig would say, I think, that the judgement of quality comes first, and then one derives by analysis the criteria, the rules, the definitions, but only after the event as it were.
Excellent point. What, then, qualifies as creativity? — Sentient
Also here though, the issue becomes by which 'standards' one judges (quality). Is something contrarian by nature 'rubbish'? — Sentient
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.