The novel is dying. — Noble Dust
Shows (TV shows) are in their prime — Noble Dust
sn't Dan Brown loved now? — Noble Dust
art forms are born, they live, and they die. — Noble Dust
Yet there's the actual philosophical problem: we try in philosophy to give an objective answer... even when the matter is obviously subjective. As if we can somehow avoid the subjectivity, for example by observing people as a whole and their various subjective views as a collection of different opinions.But, if you are trying to assess art, catalogue and contextualize it, then we need more than just 'It's cool'.
I never said everything in life requires an objective answer - that would be a real leap. :wink: — Tom Storm
People have been saying this since the 1940's. I doubt it is true. In fact it's sometimes argued that there really ought to be an important literary prize for the person who doesn't write a novel. — Tom Storm
Could be. I have yet to discover any I can sit though even when they are well done. — Tom Storm
As does everything else. But can't we still make a case for who is the greatest ancient Greek writer and why, even though their civilisation and tradition is extinct? — Tom Storm
Yet there's the actual philosophical problem: we try in philosophy to give an objective answer... even when the matter is obviously subjective. — ssu
But millions of people can and love to. — Noble Dust
Realizing that art forms are transitory is important, in my mind. — Noble Dust
In college I worked as a security guard at a relatively small modern art museum. A visitor had left their grocery bags inside by the front entrance upon entering the museum (I forget if it was raining or not). Long story short, soon enough some other visitors started asking who the artist of this artwork was (the visitor’s grocery bags, that is). It was quite the rave for a little while. — javra
I know it’s elitist of me - bad me - but when the emperor has no clothes there are no clothes on the emperor, irrespective of what others might affirm. — javra
Most understandable way to put it, Tom?We can and do establish communities of value which hold intersubjective agreements about matters assessed as important and key indicators can be established. We then have objective criteria we can understand and rate. But no one except religions and idealists are talking about transcendent truths. — Tom Storm
But I think this highlights another aspect of art and aesthetics which almost seems to be a taboo of sorts: art forms are born, they live, and they die. Poetry is dead. The novel is dying. Music is dying, actually. Shows (TV shows) are in their prime. This is just an aspect of the human experience and it's evolution. — Noble Dust
a world where we need the comfort of familiarity. — Noble Dust
This work is clearly MUCH better than Pile of Bricks. — Bitter Crank
When we were cataloguing art for Sotheby's, we had to explain why a work was important. It is part of a tradition, a heritage and context and this can be understood to some extent and the work 'valued' accordingly. No one says this is ultimate truth but it may be part of an important system for human beings. — Tom Storm
I think the bare minimum value of a tradition is it's ability to be questioned. Through questioning, it may be done away with, or it may grow stronger. I don't have strong leanings, philosophically, in either direction. It depends on the tradition. — Noble Dust
t doesn't mean that good poetry can't be written — T Clark
or that old poetry doesn't still have the vision, passion, and power it had in the past — T Clark
is Rembrandt's Night Watch a better painting than a Warhol screen-printed Marilyn? If yes or no, why — Tom Storm
There's artistic vision, truth, technical mastery, surprise, emotional insight, playfulness, complexity, narrative, simplicity, clarity, idiosyncrasy, depth, history, humor, community.... and on and on. — T Clark
To an extent it still does, but the problem with poetry specifically is it's obvious reliance on language as it's very medium. So as language changes and evolves, our ability to interface with older poetry changes. We have to rely on interpretation rather than immediate apprehension. — Noble Dust
These are all contingent to art. Except the narrative. The narrative is the key ingredient. If the artists knows to tell a story, then he/she is an artist. Everyone has a vision. What's so special about the artistic one? Everybody can tell the truth. What is so special about truth in art? It's not art in itself. Technical mastery comes with practice. Surprise can be distracting. For emotional insight you can go to a shrink. Children exhibit playfulness. Complexity and simplicity, just take a walk or look at the smoke blown in the wind. Idiosyncrasy, being original? That's the kill for Japanes art. Depth? Depth in the literal sense is easily learnt and turns reality in a fixed abstraction which, is in reality a weird collection of shapes in 2d. Depth? Shallow stories can be just as interesting. Going deep distracts the view from the object you go deep in. History I can learn from books or listening to people. You can learn it from people too and by watching the Nightwatch you can learn the clothes worn by the elite or the stuff used by them, even that dogs looked the same back then. — Raymond
Taking the discussion to ancient Chinese poetry (if it can be called that in the western sense) certainly takes things to a very specific place. I like the Tao Te Ching too, and I know you're an advocate. I won't make any comment about that specifically, but instead try to draw it back to the western Poetic tradition for ease of use. Do you agree or disagree when it comes to English poetry? — Noble Dust
Indeed. Whoever told you that doesn't understand that all languages can be translated into one another. All languages are spoken by people and no language is an isolated entity without an overlap with other languages. Even mathematical language. Language separates, gives a means for identity but it doesn't isolate. — Raymond
But you were deeply moved by someone's translation of that document from an ancient language bearing scant resemblances at best to English; not by the document itself. — Noble Dust
What I think the problem isn't that Aesthetics is a non-subject, it's just that we don't have the similar methods to study it as let's say question in logic. And when we don't have an easy objective answer, then the whole thing is deemed unimportant. — ssu
The difference here, that I feel should be made, is that you're interfacing with the Tao Te Ching in a religious sense. — Noble Dust
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