Now it has become what any four year-old might smear on a canvass, or a grown man throw against a wall. — Todd Martin
Beauty, no doubt, does not make revolutions. But a day will come when revolutions will have need of beauty. — Albert Camus
Described as such, they are mutually informing but independent practices of psychological epoché, or intermittenly suspending 'fear frustration dissatisfaction misery' (ego) ... In this way, aesthetics is an imaginative rehearsal of ethics and ethics an existential grounding for aesthetics.Aesthetics concerns the study of imaginary altruism (i.e. attention to (e.g.) the nonself, the ambiguous, the protean, the abject, the more-than-human, the numinous) in order to cultivate habits of suspending ego for perceiving the unfamiliar other as other.
Ethics concerns the study of moral altruism (i.e. intention of nonreciprocal (e.g.) welcoming, caring, helping, descalating, nurturing, resisting) in order to cultivate habits of suspending ego for responding to the exigent other as other.
TheMadFool, I suspect that what you perceive as a balance between beauty and ugliness is in fact beauty winning out over ugliness (see my previous post for an example). — Adam Hilstad
It seems to me this is the case. It is ethically right to find and create beauty where appropriate, because it enriches the lives of everyone around us. — Adam Hilstad
I don’t see it as a cosmic duel between beauty and ugliness—it just pertains to art. — Adam Hilstad
Also, a balance between good and evil should not be the goal—the goal is for good to handily win. — Adam Hilstad
I certainly don’t believe that beauty is the be all end all of reality. — Adam Hilstad
But it is, no? Look around you, what do you see? Asymmetry and symmetry trying to get one up on each other, sometimes succeeding, other times failing, with success and failure equally distributed between the two.
If symmetry = beauty and reality is about symmetry, beauty is the last word on reality.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder—very good point. At the same time however, there is a certain convergence in many cases. This is why some artists become influential, and why cultural standards of beauty develop. This is not to say these norms are always right, however 1) convergence does point to some level of objectivity, and 2) insofar as it doesn’t, consensus is sometimes wrong and should be corrected, and this seems to point to at least some linkage between aesthetics and ethics. — Adam Hilstad
This is an interesting idea, but I think there are many other equally interesting ways of framing reality — Adam Hilstad
There are many things in reality that are symmetrical, but I would argue asymmetry is actually more fundamental. — Adam Hilstad
And they are...?
for every thing that is [asymmetry], there's something that is not [symmetry].
This in itself is not symmetry, it’s the opposite. — Adam Hilstad
They are all over this forum—I think there are a lot of people on here with interesting views about what reality fundamentally is about. — Adam Hilstad
A thing and its opposite are not necessarily symmetrical. — Adam Hilstad
But surely there is ethical value in finding beauty in people, and in producing things that people will find beautiful—is there not? I don’t mean to say that beauty is as logical as right and wrong may be—only that it is ultimately subservient to ethical concerns in this way. — Adam Hilstad
there is great beauty in ugliness — Tom Storm
Sounds like some ugly wise-ass mofo who's still pissin' vinegar 'cause he's gotten too damn old for those 'juvenile and specious beauties' of yesteryear ... I'm almost (not quite yet) there with him. :smirk:A wise old man told me once that aging and maturity involved understanding that there is great beauty in ugliness. He went on to explain that what is readily understood as beauty is often juvenile and specious. I often ponder this. — Tom Storm
:100: :clap: I appreciate your succinct clarity.Aesthetics is inclusive of the sublime - the capacity we have to appreciate that which we fail to understand, which is ‘naturally’ distressing, confronting or threatening. Aesthetics is not just about creating beauty, but about what attracts our attention beyond logic and understanding, and beyond the ‘right’ or the Good.
... It is at this level that our faculty of imagination is crucial - and where the logic of language breaks down.
Much of today’s modern art challenges this artificiality. We judge ‘ugliness’ by our own limited capacity for imagination or understanding. — Possibility
Much of today’s modern art challenges this artificiality. We judge ‘ugliness’ by our own limited capacity for imagination or understanding. — Possibility
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