It seems clear enough that you have not. It seems a good thing if you exercise your ability. It might be praiseworthy. But you are not doing wrong if you do not. — Bartricks
Note, even if you think that we - those of us with an ability to produce beautiful things - are positively obliged to exercise our abilities, surely even you admit that it is far more wrong to destroy a beautiful thing than it is to fail to create one? — Bartricks
If someone held a hostage at gunpoint and demanded you draw them a beautiful painting to let the hostage go, I think you would be obligated to draw said painting if you can. The difference between that situation and the situation where you decide whether or not to draw under no stress, seems to be the clarity of the consequences. — khaled
That's because generally, destroying a beautiful thing is entirely unnecessary, whereas an artist may have reasons for not creating a beautiful thing (burnout, no time, mental/physical toll, etc). — khaled
There are lots of things that are unnecessary, yet morally permissible.
And a person who has an artistic ability and is in perfect health, mental and otherwise, is still not under any positive obligation to exercise their ability. — Bartricks
magine you are good at art - you can, if you so wish, produce beautiful paintings - but you decide not to. Have you done wrong — Bartricks
If the artist could magically create era defining pieces of art at the snap of his fingers, and chooses not to do so, then yes I’d think he’s in the wrong. — khaled
But John Singer Sargent or Picasso did have an obligation to produce art, as they worked very quickly and with ease (as much ease as clicking one's fingers). That just seems prima facie false — Bartricks
Because omitting to create such works does not show disrespect to any person or to any object.
Is there any reason to reject that analysis? — Bartricks
Imagine you are good at art - you can, if you so wish, produce beautiful paintings - but you decide not to. Have you done wrong? — Bartricks
To begin with, you need to distinguish between what the artist knows as "beautiful", and what the audience wants as "beautiful". — Metaphysician Undercover
How do you draw that conclusion? N — khaled
If the artist could magically create era defining pieces of art at the snap of his fingers, and chooses not to do so, then yes I’d think he’s in the wrong. — khaled
Jeez. You said that if an artist could produce art with the click of his fingers — Bartricks
Oh, what a brilliant distinction......not. Same applies. See? — Bartricks
How do you draw that conclusion? No, none of them were obligated to create art, because none of them could have known their art would have been worth creating. — khaled
They didn't have the benefit of hindsight. — khaled
An artist cannot know that his piece will bring much good. But if he did, and he could create it easily, then yes he would be obligated to do so. — khaled
That is to say, if the artist can produce art he knows will be good (and can do so very easily). Which never actually happens. — khaled
Believe me, most great artists - most great anything - knew full well they were great at the time. — Bartricks
we can just as well imagine an artist who knows full well that were they to exercise their artistic ability, they would create great art (for there is no contradiction involved in the supposition). — Bartricks
If the artist could magically create era defining pieces of art at the snap of his fingers, and chooses not to do so, then yes I’d think he’s in the wrong. — khaled
it remains as obvious as ever that there is no positive obligation on the person to exercise their ability. — Bartricks
it is not morally required. Why? Because omitting to create such works does not show disrespect to any person or to any object. — Bartricks
I have offered an explanation. The job, then, is to test that explanation. — Bartricks
There are many things that do not show disrespect to any person or object and yet are morally obligatory. For example, reporting a robbery if you see one. So it seems that "does not show disrespect" is not enough to guarantee something is not obligatory. — khaled
Knowing you're a great artist =/= Knowing the next piece of art you produce will bring about much good. Similar to how a gold medalist, even though they (and everyone else) knows they're a great athlete, cannot know they will get a gold medal, or even do well at all in the next olympics. — khaled
Is false. If it was obvious, you'd have denied my quote above. — khaled
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