Can we agree on properties that give beauty or harmony in objects, humans, artworks and phenomena? — Eros1982
If yes, why we see all kind of government/political intrusions into aesthetics: through educating kids, through promoting "artworks" and "artists" who are politically correct, through declaring poets people who are not poets, through staging "plays" that are anything but plays, through turning political agendas into "excellent scripts" for movies, etc.? — Eros1982
Should philosophers and simple humans give up the idea that beauty and ugliness result from certain features and/or properties? — Eros1982
Should philosophers and simple humans give up the idea that beauty and ugliness may result from certain features and/or properties? — Eros1982
If yes, why we see all kinds of political intrusions into aesthetics: through educating kids, through promoting "artworks" and "artists" who are politically correct, — Eros1982
If we can, how about the property of 'novel / nested symmetries'?Can we agree on properties that give beauty or harmony in objects, humans, artworks and phenomena? — Eros1982
I think "certain features and/or properties" (e.g. symmetries) make it easier – less costly in calories for a CNS – to have an aesthetic response – and get a reward system spike! – from attention to those "features and/or properies". Imagine a (i.e. your favorite) sonnet, natural vista, woman's walk, man's hands, musical composition, logical argument / mathematical proof.Should philosophersand simple humansgive up the idea that beauty and ugliness may result from certain features and/or properties?
Perhaps, but good luck trying to identify just what they are. — Janus
I thought the same. But I think that the OP doesn't want to identify them at all, just remark on how some groups use them in bad faith. He used the example of politicians or government agencies that "overrated" some artworks instead of valuing aesthetics. — javi2541997
Not all artworks are beautiful in any straightforward sense; some that are considered great may even be grotesque. — Janus
the idea of aesthetics is tied to the idea of non-ethical value judgement and the question is what exactly are we valuing if not beauty? — Janus
Can we agree on properties that give beauty or harmony in objects, humans, artworks and phenomena? — Eros1982
Hence, I do think in arts there must be some kind of standard/criteria on what consists of an artwork (poem, novel, song, etc.) — Eros1982
But when you start to appreciate Rothko, you develop a new standard.
In other words the work has priority, and the standard is just the current theory and standard - a post hoc justification and teaching aid. — unenlightened
I should lack any arguments against Yoko Ono if she tells me that a time (maybe after 200 years) will come when everyone will understand that she was the greatest poet and painter in UK of the 21st century :) — Eros1982
It's good to have a Moliere in this forum, so I can talk about plays :) — Eros1982
If you don't have puzzles, character development and a motive, you definitely do not have a play. I can say, for example, that Jean Racine is a poor playwright (for my taste), but he has all those three features in his works, and I do not deny that he writes plays. But for some works of Eugene Ionesco, I doubt whether those should be called plays, as I might say also that Ibsen's Peer Gynt comes closer to novels and movie scripts, than to plays. — Eros1982
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