I would make the distinction between what is experienced, in the sense of what happens to someone, and how it is experienced, in the sense of how one responds or is affected you what happens. Both the what and the how are part of experience. — Fooloso4
I don't follow. How is being on the receiving end of such discrimination not an experience of discrimination? — Fooloso4
That is not always the case. You are conflating an ideal with reality. The fact of the matter is that prejudice has not been eliminated. A white man in the US will not experience this discrimination when buying a house or applying for a loan or applying for a job or being stopped for a motor vehicle check. — Fooloso4
Have you ever taken a basic ethics course? Lol. — chiknsld
I actually completely disagree with Kant's deontological ethics and take the completely opposite side with Aristotle's teleological ethics. — chiknsld
I’m saying the approach to art up through the 1700’s was based on mimesis, even when constructing purposes and ideals. The concept of mimesis was brought into question as philosophy and art stopped believing that perception is correspondence of the mind with an independently existing world. — Joshs
I’m saying the approach to art up through the 1700’s was based on mimesis, even when constructing purposes and ideals. The concept of mimesis was brought into question as philosophy and art stopped believing that perception is correspondence of the mind with an independently existing world. — Joshs
The postmodern world is led by philosophy , with the sciences being slowly dragged into it kicking and screaming. — Joshs
Art for Aristotle is a representation of ideals, but artists must accurately portray reality to be successful, so overall it is mimetic. — Joshs
There are of course modern concepts of perception and they continue to develop as we learn more about the world and ourselves.
It's unclear what you mean by "direct impressing of the world upon the mind". It seems to mean that ancient people could only record their perceptions and therefore their art could only be representational. If I'm not mistaken, some of the oldest art known is thought to be depictions of some kind of mother-earth spirit. Sculptures of a subject that they didn't actually perceive with their senses. — praxis
if you go back far enough in time, art was thought of as just the direct impressing of the world upon the mind. So yes, the modern concept of perception is an invention. — Joshs
Once upon a time art was conceived as mimesis , imitation. There wasn’t really a concept of perception as interpretation as we accept it to be today. if you go back far enough in time, art was thought of as just the direct impressing of the world upon the mind. So yes, the modern concept of perception is an invention. — Joshs
Once upon a time art was conceived as mimesis , imitation. There wasn’t really a concept of perception as interpretation as we accept it to be today. if you go back far enough in time, art was thought of as just the direct impressing of the world upon the mind. So yes, the modern concept of perception is an invention. — Joshs
So the impressionists were beginning to take seriously the contribution of the perceiver to what is perceived. — Joshs
And what movements within the art world expressed this critique of the clockwork universe? — Joshs
What philosophical and scientific innovation made it new? — Joshs
You sound more like an engineer than an artist. — Joshs
How does the sensual appear in DaVinci’s Last Supper and why is the perspective such a spectacularly powerful element of the drama? — Joshs
remember reading a description by an art critic of a work
of abstract art that consisted of a series of geometric shapes. The critic argued that these shapes captured some sort of deep essence , some transcendental
truth , underlying sensory appearances. Why would the artist assume there would be such an underlying order? — Joshs
remember reading a description by an art critic of a work
of abstract art that consisted of a series of geometric shapes. The critic argued that these shapes captured some sort of deep essence , some transcendental
truth , underlying sensory appearances. Why would the artist assume there would be such an underlying order?
Because Kant showed that whatever contingent causal
concatenation of sensations we experience in visual perception, we cannot assume that visual experience presents us with a direct truth. The renaissance artists seem to have had absolute faith in such a truth. This is why it was so important for them to render precisely and faithfully the perspectival facts of a painting. One could get close to the mind of God by disclosing the rational
logic of the visually appearing world.
But Kant told us that the only direct truths in a visual scene are the inborn categories of perception that puts the world together for us in terms of causality, space and time. So one could imagine the abstract painter
‘abstracting’ from the contingent details of a scene these underlying categories in the guise of geometrical
forms. The real truth of a scene is in its deep categorical structure. — Joshs
There is no need for an example, censorship is well known method with a well known outcome. — SpaceDweller
threat to free speech is not so much extremism as it is censorship and propaganda.
It's difficult to define the scope of extremism when censorship and propaganda play major role. — SpaceDweller
Great art isn’t just application of extant theory, it is the creation of new theory, a new vision. — Joshs
Significant movements in art are not about merely reshuffling old technical concepts but offering a new vision. — Joshs
Are you saying that all of the philosophy that came after Hume, as a critical reaction to his thinking and the era he belonged to, was wrong about him? — Joshs
I haven’t read much on Hume in relation to modern art , but so far I’m having no luck finding any writings connecting him to cubism
or any other trend toward abstraction in art. We could analyze why that might be. — Joshs
There certainly must have been a dawning realization that something intervenes between our experience of the world and the world itself, such that it became increasing important to capture this something rather than a photographic copy of reality. — Joshs
Recognizing that thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are blind. This is a realization you will not find in Descartes through Hume. — Joshs
In fact, I would argue that in for for an artist to express a more developed worldview in their art, they must pass through a ‘Kantian’ stage. — Joshs
Also, relationship is important. I am something different to my brother than I am to myself, something else again to my wife, something else again to my pet, to my boss, to my food animals, and so on. You might argue that we are largely relational, not really being anything in ourselves. — petrichor
Nothing could go wrong when the State has the right to determine historical truth and to punish dissent from it. — NOS4A2
I'd guess that his point was to "modernize" the philosophy. To make it compatible with the modern scientific world view. — waarala
I could imagine that Kant's philosophy could make stupid people at least a little bit smarter. — waarala
I think there is good ideas in his thinking. His basic natural scientific standpoint is not mine though. — waarala
My point isn't that speech must be censored, but that there's no "right" to say whatever one wants, no matter how stupid, offensive, malicious, bigoted it may be. — Ciceronianus
If you don't mind me asking, how does that play out in ordinary life? — Tom Storm
In theoretical philosophy, a Kantian maintains a view that there is necessary apriori structures of thought or understanding which order or form our experience of the sensuous world. And that these apriori structures or conceptual schemes are real only when they function in this way i.e. are conditioning the empirical or spatial-temporal experience. This means that a Kantian is a transcendental idealist who is also an empirical realist :) — waarala
I corrected your misstatement about Kant. — 180 Proof