Is it merely a matter of fame? Does something become quintessential once it crosses over a certain threshold of saturation? What distinguishes something from being quintessential rather than atypical? — thewonder
Quintessential is defined by google dictionary as meaning "representing the most perfect or typical example of a quality or class". What makes something the "most perfect" example of a quality or class as opposed to just simply being typical? — thewonder
I'm reminded of discussions of the standard meter. Every meter rule is a meter long by being the same length as the standard meter. But the standard meter is incomparable. It is a meter long by fiat. So perhaps the quintessential Hamlet is whatever it is said to be by whoever is the current executive director of aesthetics ... — unenlightened
It would be helpful if you defined what you mean by quintessential rather than just throwing it out there without explanation. — T Clark
is the quintessential Hamlet, not actually Hamlet? — Banno
Quintessential" is a toast. It's farcical in the sense that it can only ever be so sincere, but it is in itself a compliment. Are you suggesting that the "most typical" or "essential" examples of anything are purely subjective? I could agree, but I think that stating that something is quintessential makes an Ontological claim that suggests that the existent is somehow more prototypical than all of the others. — thewonder
"Seminal" and "quintessential" do differ. Younger Than Yesterday is the quintessential Byrds album, but, Mr. Tamourine Man is their seminal album. They made a name for themselves by being the only band who could adequately cover Bob Dylan, but the band itself was something other than a project that was devoted to just that. — thewonder
We speak of things as if there was an ideal when we know that it is only defined by our subjective interpretation. What Philosophical rules could there be for aesthetic? I don't think that things can be considered to be in themselves beautiful. Beauty is defined by the relation that the subject has to the existent. — thewonder
So, by what you are suggesting, Olivier's Hamlet is "quintessential" because it's on the Criterion Channel? — thewonder
I must say that they really are incomparable. I wonder if it is at all meaningful to speak of standards in art — thewonder
Is it merely a matter of fame? Does something become quintessential once it crosses over a certain threshold of saturation? What distinguishes something from being quintessential rather than typical? — thewonder
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