Neither.Richard Feynman is attracted to explore the fragments when taken together produce beauty.
Simone Weil is attracted to the reality beauty conceals.
[W]hich ... attracts you the most: the attraction to wholeness or to fragmentation when appreciating beauty? — Nikolas
↪Nikolas
Nikolas, I remember you from that other philosophy site, I forgot its name, because my mind is quickly turning to mush. The memory part. There are tons of people here from that other site, including, but not limited to JohnDoe7 (written backwards). There may be more, I only remember the memorable ones, like yourself -- your devotion to holding Simone Weil as the person being the smartest next to god is unmistakably you. Plus your name was nick something or other. No disrespect, only faulty and leaky memory here. — god must be atheist
↪Nikolas Yep, it's you. Interesting to hear how you describe the reasons to get banned. My memory (as faulty as it is) recall is that you were banned because you simply ignored valid and irrefutable reasons to counter your theories or the theories you presented. You were invincible in arguments because you simply dismissed or did not counter arguments, which were, like I said, valid and irrefutable. Oh, and you never actually made a point, even when you were squeezed: you kept on talking about some great hifolutin' secretive truths that only you, Plato, and Simone Weir understood, but when you were put to the task to describe what the secret knowledge was, you never revealed it. — god must be atheist
There's no dark side of the moon really. Matter of fact, it's all dark.
↪Nikolas Neither. — 180 Proof
There is no right or wrong here but only asking which direction attracts you the most: the attraction to wholeness or to fragmentation when appreciating beauty? — Nikolas
There is no right or wrong here but only asking which direction attracts you the most: the attraction to wholeness or to fragmentation when appreciating beauty? — Nikolas
I think of the deep kind as "beauty" (and agree with you about the OP) but the superficial kind is merely "pretty" or "attractive" or "fashionable" or eye/ear-"candy" ... Paraphrasing Iris Murdoch, the latter facilitates ego-fantasy (or fixation) and the former ego-suspension (i.e. "unselfing", which is her word). — 180 Proof
It's what you called "superficial" as I wrote agreeing with you, Fool, in contrast to beauty that is "deep". And "eye candy" isn't derogatory, just deflationary, connoting a fleeting, if not trivial, or ornamental / cosmetic, quality. — 180 Proof
Check out the link.Paraphrasing Iris Murdoch, [superficial beauty aka "eye candy"] facilitates ego-fantasy (or Id-fixation) and [deep beauty aka "sublime"] ego-suspension (i.e. "unselfing", which is her word). — 180 Proof
Paraphrasing Iris Murdoch, [superficial beauty aka "eye candy"] facilitates ego-fantasy (or Id-fixation) and [deep beauty aka "sublime"] ego-suspension (i.e. "unselfing", which is her word).
— 180 Proof
Check out the link. — 180 Proof
Check out the link. — 180 Proof
"3.21 Like Zen koans which provoke a suspension of conceptual thinking, works of art in particular (and aesthetic experiences in general) prompt suspension of ego - what Iris Murdoch referred to as unselfing - by presenting sensationally or emotionally heightened encounters with the nonself which make it more likely than not for one to forget oneself for the moment if not longer.
3.22 Altruism - judging, by action or inaction, not to do harm to another - begins with learning and practicing techniques for forgetting oneself: unselfing: suspending ego. (Ecstatic techniques (e.g. making art.)) This is the moral benefit of art, but not its function.
3.23 The function of making art (along with morality & rationality (see 2.5)) is to help expand - develop - Agency, or to inversely limit its shadow: Foolery (see 1.1)"
— 180 Proof
Is it possible you could go a little more in depth here please? I find your view of Art, Aesthetics and Morality a possible point of interest for myself.
Especially in regard to the bold.
— I like sushi
3.21 says Aesthetics prepares us for Ethics and, in light of the preceding sections (statements 1.0-3.2), Ethics informs Aesthetics. E.g. Children begin learning 'right & wrong' through play and from bedtime stories (fables); Parents use games and storytelling to teach their children what's expected of them (good) and what they should avoid (bad). A dialectics, so to speak, of attention & intention.
3.22 says altruism can be learned and habituated by engaging in and making art because fully experiencing works of art (or nature in an aesthetic way) requires one to pay attention without intending to impose self-serving demands or whimsy of ego on the work (i.e. to move oneself out of one's own way, that is, to forget/immerse oneself); this 'attending without ego' is required in order to encounter an other as other, which is the sine qua non of altruistic judgment.
3.23 riffs off of 3.21 shifting the focus more explicitly to Agency the expansion of which is, I propose, the primary function of philosophy. To learn to reflectively inquire (e.g. making art) and reflectively practice (e.g. moral conduct) in tandem; to the degree these complementary exercises are habituated and optimized, Agency - capability for judging (see 3.11) - expands (and inversely foolery narrows (see 1.1, 1.12, 1.6)).
Any clearer? The references to other statements are included to help contextualize or build on earlier statements. Also, the highlit links embedded throughout making disparate implicit connections more explicit. I'm sure you'll tell me if that helps; I look forward to some elaboration on this "possible point of interest" of yours vis-à-vis my relation of aesthetics to ethics. My turn now to read your replies to the OP
↪TheMadFool
Paraphrasing Iris Murdoch, [superficial beauty aka "eye candy"] facilitates ego-fantasy (or Id-fixation) and [deep beauty aka "sublime"] ego-suspension (i.e. "unselfing", which is her word).
— 180 Proof
Check out the link. — 180 Proof
"But someone who, to take the opposite case, believes in the beautiful itself, can see both it and the things that participate in it and doesn't believe that the participants are it or that it itself is the participants--is he living in a dream or is he awake?
"He's very much awake." — Nikolas
It's ... less worthy than "deep beauty" (e.g. bumpin' to hip hop is far less worthy than swingin' with bebop; or riding through a Disney safari park is far less worthy than backpacking through the Amazonian rainforest; or praising biblical creationism is far less worthy than studying darwinian natural selection; or visiting the Taj Mahal casino in Las Vegas, NV is far less worthy than touring the Taj Mahal monument in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, etc) in so far as it's much easier to forget oneself in, and be profoundly affected by, the difficult pleasures of engaging "deep beauty" (the latter) than the relatively easy enjoyment, or commodification, of "eye candy" (the former).Thus my question to you - is "eye candy" not worth our appreciation, love, respect...worship even? — TheMadFool
↪TheMadFool It's what you called "superficial" as I wrote agreeing with you, Fool, in contrast to beauty that is "deep". And "eye candy" isn't derogatory, just deflationary, connoting a fleeting, if not trivial, or ornamental / cosmetic, quality. — 180 Proof
It's ... less worthy than "deep beauty" (e.g. hearing to Rhianna is far less worthy than listening to Ella Fitzgerald; or riding through a Disney safari park is far less worthy than backpacking through the Amazonian rainforest; or celebrating biblical creationism is far less worthy than studying darwinian natural selection; or visiting the Taj Mahal casino in Las Vegas, NV is far less worthy than touring the Taj Mahal monument in Agra, Uttar Pradesh, etc) insofar as it's much easier to forget oneself in, and be profoundly affected by, the difficult pleasures of engaging "deep beauty" (the latter) than the relatively easy enjoyment, or commodification, of "eye candy" (the former).
↪TheMadFool It sounds like you've never engaged yourself in – undertaken pleasurably difficult works of art or scientific & formal theorems, or have been 'quickened' by sublime natural environments & encounters – thar is, experienced ecstacies (i.e. what the poet Rilke suggests are 'the terrors of beauty'). — 180 Proof
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.