What is beautiful? Are we missing the basic sense of beauty inside aesthetics? — javi2541997
I have virtually no use for the word beauty in my daily life and although I find some things aesthetically pleasing - this might be because they are striking rather than 'beautiful'. — Tom Storm
sublime - I have no knowledge or experience of a word like this but recognise its romantic and quasi-religious associations for others. — Tom Storm
Nevertheless, I see it as "perfection". — javi2541997
We all should have a basic concept of "beauty" (as you explained in a Platonist view, for example) which is intersubjective (I guess). — javi2541997
But I think that even if we don't use the word "beauty", we all have like a basic sense of it... or at least the opposite: ugliness. — javi2541997
This link to an old post is my general treatment of the topics raised here:What is beautiful? Are we missing the basic sense of beauty inside aesthetics? — javi2541997
A pleasure so extreme it terrorizes as it fascinates.Furthermore, how would you describe the sublime?
The latter terrifies and the former seduces.Is there a distinction between "beautiful" and "sublime?"
I am not aware of any example of perfection in the world, except when the word is used in a quotidian context to subjectively describe the best example of something - eg,' This cake is perfection.' — Tom Storm
This link to an old post is my general treatment of the topics raised here: — 180 Proof
A pleasure so extreme it terrorizes as it fascinates. — 180 Proof
Bonum (good) ____ (fill in the blank). — Agent Smith
Unless you are a Platonist, isn't beauty just a term used to deal with personal taste and/or intersubjective value systems? — Tom Storm
but this experience can, I think, be objectively described as an experience of beauty. — Noble Dust
I think it's simpler than that. Beauty is an experience that's self evident. — Noble Dust
Perhaps traumatizes (i.e. to wound, to disturb, to call-oneself-into-question) is more precise than "terrorizes". Aren't there any e.g. works of art, experiences of nature or erotic encounters, javi, which have irreparably changed some aspect of your life, your self-awareness, in large or small ways? Sublime events, I feel, can leave deep, ecstatic scars.I don't see why a pleasure can "terrorizes" me. — javi2541997
I suppose I do not agree with Burke or Kant ...For beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror
which we are barely able to endure, and it amazes us so,
because it serenely disdains to destroy us.
Every angel is terrible. — Duino Elegies
What I'm suggesting is that looking deeply into this girls eyes would sufficiently convince you otherwise. — Noble Dust
So there's no way for me to demonstrate this. — Noble Dust
But we should not give up on objectively context. The paper I have read yesterday propose that there are some "supernatural" examples which we can consider as "high" or "top quality". Thus, the ones who goes further than just "beauty" — javi2541997
Perhaps traumatizes (i.e. to wound, to disturb, to call-oneself-into-question) — 180 Proof
Aren't there any e.g. works of art, experiences of nature or erotic encounters, javi, which have irreparably changed some aspect of your life, your self-awareness, in large or small ways? — 180 Proof
Sounds like we believe in different things. :smile: — Tom Storm
I think contact between humans is a different phenomenon. — Tom Storm
We seem to have moved from eyes which can be described as beautiful, to something else involving eye contact and interaction. — Tom Storm
Yukio Mishima was almost too much for me in my early twenties, — 180 Proof
I owe his sublime works a rereading – renewed encounter – soon in order to discover how they will affect me now in my late fifties. — 180 Proof
You feel I've moved my goalposts? I didn't mean to. Let me know if I'm not understanding here. — Noble Dust
the beauty of eye contact is universal. — Noble Dust
eye contact — Noble Dust
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