Comments

  • The Invalidity of Atheism


    When you asked Space Dweller “What would a valid form of atheism look like?”, if he has answered “the one in the dictionary”, would you have considered that a valid form of atheism, or are you making a distinction between atheism as a valid belief system and a valid definition of atheism (which you do not consider to be a valid belief system)?
  • The Invalidity of Atheism
    How so? I haven't felt any strong emotion about religion or philosophy in quite some time, and I don't see anything unreasonable in asking how valid and invalid atheisms manifest in your opinion, since you mentioned them.whollyrolling

    Do you personally believe there is such a thing as a valid form of atheism, or is that an oxymoron?
  • What did Gilles Deleuze mean by “positive” desire?

    "It is doubtless true that interests predispose us to a given libidinal investment, but they are not identical with this investment. Moreover, the unconscious libidinal investment is what causes us to look for our interest in one place rather than another, to fix our aims on a given path, convinced that this is where our chances lie." AO345Streetlight

    I wonder if the distinction between desire and interest is comparable to that between the virtual and the actual , or perhaps between the intensive and the extensive.
  • The Invalidity of Atheism


    What would a valid form of atheism look like?whollyrolling

    You authored an op in which you wrote the following:

    “ Many of the inhabitants of this site seem to respond with strong negative emotion, absent any rationality, to any discussion related to the bible or Christianity…”

    Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.
  • The Invalidity of Atheism


    The left changes its guiding principles and the movements it promotes as if it's changing underwear. BLM had as its central tenet the destruction of Western culture and its institutions before the group seemed to dissolve due to fraud and abandonment, and "cancel culture" is self-explanatorywhollyrolling

    They may change their guiding principles but their underlying philosophical-moral grounding is just as stable as your theistic moral grounding. You just think they have no stable grounding because you don’t understand it. You own philosophical-theological thinking is stuck in the 18th century. Why they think what they do is invisible to you, so you rely on misreadings and misinterpretations. I respect your misreadings, though. You belong to a traditionalistic culture and I support its protection. I want to see small town America thrive as a a quaint alternative to urban metropolitan America. They are two worlds and each needs to go in it’s own separate direction. We should really drop all the crap about whose side is right or moral.


    “Cancel culture“ is a derogatory of the right leveled against the left term just as ‘ flying spaghetti monster’ is a derogatory term for God. Both are self-explanatory terms for how one group glimpses the view of another from behind their own blinders.

    Please feel free to explain the morality behind a movement which desires the destruction of all institutions and a state of resulting lawlessness.whollyrolling

    There’s a difference between lacking a moral grounding and having a different moral grounding than the one you prefer, and between an aim that sees itself as moral and an outcome that succeeds in achieving that moral aim.


    I think you’re arguing that the outcome of anarchism will be one which is not moral, but are you really claiming that their aims are the creation of human suffering, that their motivation is to make life more painful for the average person? The fact that you could engage in an endless debate among adherents of anarchist positions about whether the ‘destruction of all institutions’ results in complete lawlessness, and if so, whether and why this is or is not a more ‘moral’ outcome for society than the alternatives demonstrates only that your view of the connection between their
    moral aims and the likely outcomes differs from their own calculus.

    I'm not sure what you're trying to say here: "Apparently you dont need a God for a culture of blame."whollyrolling

    Morality rests on justice , which depends on emotions of blame, retribution, punishment, condemnation, free will vs determinism. You argued that atheism imposes no accountability.

    And yet, as I have argued, identity politics is despised by the right because it has highly structured ways of holding people accountable (such as by ‘cancelling’ them) for what it considers to be moral infractions. Again, you disagree about whether the outcomes are moral, but their reasoning is moralistic, according to agreed upon definitions of moral reasoning, because thier aim is the betterment of society. I understand that you believe their reasoning is flawed without access to a god, that accountability for them cannot ‘really’ be moral without god because human reasoning without access to god cannot be moral.

    As Social Constructionist Ken Gergen explains:

    “By and large identity politics has depended on a rhetoric of blame, the illocutionary effects of which are designed to chastise the target (for being unjust, prejudiced, inhumane, selfish, oppressive, and/or violent).”
  • The Invalidity of Atheism
    . Atheism is not exclusive to the left, it's just an easy default for them because it is amoral and imposes no accountabilitywhollyrolling

    Movements associated with the left such as BLM , and the cancel culture of identity politics in general are highly moralistic. So much for lack of moral accountability. Apparently you dont need a God for a culture of blame.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    What is positive side of killing someone for fun? Nothing to do with moral or immoral. Why would any society want people to do it?Jackson

    I thought we were talking about moral relativism.
    postmodernists argue that all morality is culture -relative.
    — Joshs

    Would not agree with that assertion. Does any culture believe stabbing and murdering people is acceptable (outside of war!)?
    Jackson
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    No. Just what I said. Stabbing people for fun. What culture thinks that is good?Jackson

    You just did it again. Saying someone stabs someone else for fun is interpreting their behavior as willfully immoral. We assume the person deliberately caused harm because they enjoyed being cruel. We assume they lacked caring and empathy. But to label them as immoral we have to stop the analysis there, and not inquire how someone could come to feel that way about others. We have various psychiatric labels which help, such as sociopathy and psychosis. But most of us tend to believe in a notion of willful evil.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    You're saying Marx is ground zero for everything in philosophy since Hegel?

    Probably not.
    frank

    You treat figures like Marx as though their ideas are hermetically sealed products that are either used or discarded, and bear little connection to a larger history of thought.

    There is a rich, interwoven tapestry of philosophical
    positions that spread out in the wake of Hegel , just as Hegel himself belonged to a web of ideas going back before him. Marx is just one of dozens of important writers who emerged beginning in the mid 1800’s who contribute to this fabric. There are so many interconnections between authors like Hegel , Marx , Feurbach, Kierkegaard, Freud, Habermas, Adorno, Focault , Derrida, Piaget Sartre, James , Lacan, Bergson, Nietzsche and Heidegger that it is silly to try and wall any of them off from each other as either useful or not , relevant or irrelevant. None of them are ground zero. Instead, they are all nodes in the larger network
    of thought and all are still useful.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    Does any culture believe stabbing and murdering people is acceptable (outside of war!)?Jackson

    Are you asking if a culture believes doing immoral things is moral? The answer is no. You know why? Because labels like ‘murder’ already presuppose the condemning of the perpetrator as immoral. You need to ask the question differently. Let’s let social constructionist Ken Gergen lay out the issue:

    “Constructionist thought militates against the claims to ethical foundations implicit in much identity politics - that higher ground from which others can so confidently be condemned as inhumane, self-serving, prejudiced, and unjust. Constructionist thought painfully reminds us that we have no transcendent rationale upon which to rest such accusations, and that our sense of moral indignation is itself a product of historically and culturally situated traditions. And the constructionist intones, is it not possible that those we excoriate are but living also within traditions that are, for them, suffused with a sense of ethical primacy?“
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    I'm not insulting Marx by the observation that history has left him behind. It's just a fact.frank
    One only leaves a thinker behind by incorporating the valuable features of his work into a new whole, such as to think him better than he thought himself. I’m not convinced you or Hayek understand very much about the history of philosophy since Hegel, that is to say , all of the philosophies and social sciences which have benefited from his influence. A central feature of post-Hegelian thought is the appreciation that individual knowing is the product of interactive dynamics within a cultural community, that knowledge and values are in large part socially constructed through language. Post-Hegelians are thus moral relativists rather than moral realists.
    Conservative post-Hegelians maintain that there are certain higher order universal valuative principles that are not themselves relative to culture, whereas postmodernists argue that all morality is culture -relative.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    This interests me. Can you say more about the Hegelian influence on AI?Jackson

    Today’s neural models make use of complexity systems approaches.
    If you look at the model of a complex dynamical
    system it is essentially a dialectical movement. Temporary states of equilibrium in a living system are followed by a disequilibrating event , and then restabilize at a higher state of organization, like a spiral.
  • What is the extreme left these days?


    Hayek may have lived in the 20th century , but his political theory is derived from philosophical ideas that are considerably older than Marx. Essentially Hayek is an 18th century philosopher in the cloak of a 20th century political thinker.
    — Joshs

    I don't think so, but it's a moot point. His view is still the the blueprint for the world you live in.
    frank

    I dont live in his world. You live in his world.


    What also emerged from
    Hegelianism was Darwin’s theory of evolution
    — Joshs

    How so?
    frank


    Darwinism as Hegelian Dialectics Applied to Biology:

    https://evolutionnews.org/2020/09/darwinism-as-hegelian-dialectics-applied-to-biology/
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    Hayek is 20th Century. Marx was from a world that's gone now.frank

    Hayek may have lived in the 20th century , but his political theory is derived from philosophical ideas that are considerably older than Marx. Essentially Hayek is an 18th century philosopher in the cloak of a 20th century political thinker. Given your respect for him, I wager your own notion of the cutting edge of philosophy (and by derivation political theory) consists of figures like John Stewart Mill , Kant , Edmund Burke and Adam Smith, although you may know their ideas chiefly through contemporary interpreters on the right.

    I would suggest that it is not possible to understand contemporary thinking on the left and far left without making your way through Marx
    — Joshs

    That may be, but what relevance does the left or far left have in the world today?
    frank

    Today’s political left and far left were born out of the aftermath of Hegel’s project. What also emerged from
    Hegelianism was Darwin’s theory of evolution, American Pragmatism, psychoanalysis, the human potential
    movement and humanistic psychology, and today’s leading approaches in neuroscience, perceptual psychology, personality theory and models of psychopathology , including analysis of autism, schizophrenia, depression, grief and ptsd.

    I would include the most advanced thinking in artificial intelligence , which is a key point , because more and more you will find that ‘smart’ technology based on how the mind works will dominate the corporate world and shape its politics, and eventually the larger culture. . Those who fail to keep up with these advances in ‘mind’ technologies will fall gather and farther behind economically.
    I would argue that the new thinking about intelligence as a function of reciprocally causal global integrated neural networks is incompatible with the philosophical framework that Hayek operated within. If one were to poll those at the leading edge of the field of A.I., one would find very few embracing Hayak’s brand of libertarianism , but most would align themselves with one post-Hegelian philosophy or another. This is no coincidence. Each eta of technology is made possible by a specific philosophical ground, with its own implications for political theory .

    On a worldwide basis humanity is splitting f into two camps , traditionalists and postmodern globalist urbanites. there is a reason why the word’s greatest concentration of high tech companies happens to be in the most leftists cities in the world, San Francisco and Seattle. Conservative high tech is an oxymoron, like military intelligence.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    Since Hayek is relevant now and Marx is really completely irrelevant, I'd want to judge leftism by how it relates to Hayek.frank

    See what you think of this analysis:

    Hayek’s brand of free market libertarianism is embraced by conservatives and neo-liberals on the right.
    Marx is completely irrelevant to Hayek and his followers because they don’t consider him an influence on their thinking. Their political philosophy is pre-Marxist The situation is quite different on the left. To the extent Marx’s specific doctrines are less relevant to them than in the past it only because major elements of his thought have been re-interpreted and incorporated into neo and post-marxist models. I would suggest that it is not possible to understand contemporary thinking on the left and far left without making your way through Marx, which conservatives from Jordan Peterson to Andrew Breitbart have recognized.
  • What is the extreme left these days?
    What is the left now, and what is the far left? Who is the far left?frank

    Is this strictly a political question? Do you measure the leftness of the left solely in terms of proximity to Marx , or can ‘left’ mean progressive or radical in a different sense? What about a philosophical far left? Do you think Foucault, Deleuze and Derrida were to the left or the right of Marx politically? What about philosophically? It seems to me the ‘far left’ is a notion concocted by conservatives like Jordan Peterson, who is constitutionally incapable of distinguishing between figures like Derrida and Marx, and between postmodernism and socialism.
  • Is Mathematics Racist?
    Here is an article that is disturbing, at least for me, an old retired prof. What do you think?jgill

    I think you need to know that the author of that article , Jason Rantz, is a right wing propagandist not known for his journalistic integrity. Is there any legitimate basis for his claims? While there may well be, please, for my sake, do your homework and find a more well researched and impartial source to post here so I dont have to be exposed to Rantz’s inane scratchings.

    ( like this from the Washington Post:

    Is math racist? Wrong question.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/12/15/is-math-racist-public-school-pedagogy/
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake
    You may well be right. But he is a legitimate, well published academic, based at UCL a fairly good university.unenlightened

    I’m reading his book , From Knowledge to Wisdom right now. It’s published by Pentire Press, whose only book is this one. Many of his other works are also self-published. One publisher , Paragon Press, is controlled by the Unification Church( remember that one?).
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake
    You are by no means alone. Here is club you can join.

    https://www.ucl.ac.uk/friends-of-wisdom/what-went-wrong#blu
    unenlightened

    The founder of the club, Nicholas Maxwell , manages to misread much of the philosophy of the past 100 years. He seems to advocate for a kind of bastardized Hegelianism. It’s hard to mount a clear critique of the modern-postmodern world if you can’t even interpret its founders effectively.
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake
    The only way left for me is to reject this civilization in its totality and embrace the life of a shepherd in a countryside, away from all the trouble and in peace with myself.Eskander

    Nietzsche said that all philosophy is autobiography. I think that is true of politics and religion as well.
    I’m wondering if there is something in your biography that may be making you inclined to project your personal issues onto an abstraction , the so-called ‘global situation’.
    What is your relationship with your neighbors in your local community? Do you relate to their outlooks or are you as alienated from them as you are from the modern world as a whole? If you are happily ensconced within your own little corner of the world , why should it matter to your peace of mind what happens in places far from you? And if you are not happy in your own community , do you mean to tell me that you cannot think of anyplace in the entire world where you could find common ground with others on the basis of your religious, political or ethical values?
    If you can’t run far enough to escape a world of suffering and pain, perhaps it is becuase you’re trying to run away from yourself.
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake


    Btw, science and mathematics (esp) is a shared heritage of mankind. Every civilization has a played a decisive role in its advancement and STEM will take care of itself. I'm more concerned with the ethical- social-political-economic side of the equation.Eskander

    Science and mathematics are not ethically neutral universal achievements. They are utterly inextricable from the social-political-economic history of the West, and as contemporary science and mathematics have been embraced by non-Western countries, those countries have assimilated major elements of Western ethico-political thought into their indigenous culture.
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake


    What we are witnessing is social and moral degradation.SpaceDweller


    “I'm a Catholic whore, currently enjoying congress out of wedlock with my black Jewish boyfriend who works at a military abortion clinic. So, hail Satan, and have a lovely afternoon” (Colin Firth, Kingsman)
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake



    Prosperous modern people have often moved to the country or joined communes, or decided to live off the grid as a 'remedy' for the present era. I understand the power of this idea and acknowledge that it might provide some peace, if not boredom. I suspect that the recent and enduring cult of authenticity and hipster artisanal products is another expression of this impulse. As was Transcendentalism in the 19th century.Tom Storm

    Made me think of the Eagles song, Last Resort:

    She came from Providence
    One in Rhode Island
    Where the old world shadows hang
    Heavy in the air
    She packed her hopes and dreams
    Like a refugee
    Just as her father came across the sea

    She heard about a place
    People were smilin'
    They spoke about the red man's way
    And how they loved the land

    And they came from everywhere
    To the Great Divide
    Seeking a place to stand
    Or a place to hide

    Down in the crowded bars
    Out for a good time
    Can't wait to tell you all
    What it's like up there

    And they called it paradise
    I don't know why
    Somebody laid the mountains low
    While the town got high

    Then the chilly winds blew down
    Across the desert
    Through the canyons of the coast
    To the Malibu

    Where the pretty people play
    Hungry for power
    To light their neon way
    Give them things to do

    Some rich men came and raped the land
    Nobody caught 'em
    Put up a bunch of ugly boxes
    And Jesus people bought 'em

    And they called it paradise
    The place to be
    They watched the hazy sun
    Sinking in the sea

    You can leave it all behind
    Sail to Lahaina
    Just like the missionaries did
    So many years ago

    They even brought a neon sign
    "Jesus is coming"
    Brought the white man's burden down
    Brought the white man's reign

    Who will provide the grand design?
    What is yours and what is mine?
    'Cause there is no more new frontier
    We have got to make it here

    We satisfy our endless needs
    And justify our bloody deeds
    In the name of destiny
    And in the name of God

    And you can see them there
    On Sunday morning
    Stand up and sing about
    What it's like up there


    They call it paradise
    I don't know why
    You call someplace paradise
    Kiss it goodbye
  • A tree is known by its fruits - The Enlightenment was a mistake
    This seems like the expulsion from eden story retold. You praise the intellectual insights obtained via the development of Western culture and yet claim to be alienated from that culture. Your having been born in a non-Western country adds to your feeling of alienation. But is the solution a return to Eden, that is , a return to the ‘blissful’ ignorance of pre-modern society? You say you “don’t see any ancient civilization giving birth to an alternative world order in the foreseeable future”. Does that mean you would wish for such a prospect even if you don’t think it is likely to happen? If you acknowledge legitimate insights contributed by modern thought, do you think these can be ignored even if we want to return to a simpler world?

    The only way left for me is to reject this civilization in its totality and embrace the life of a shepherd in a countryside, away from all the trouble and in peace with myself.Eskander

    It seems to me that you under-appreciate the extent to which you embody modern Western thinking, regardless of the fact that you are from a non-Western culture, and that you feel alienated from the contemporary world.
    Your alienation is a quintessentially modern alienation, and can even be argued to be part of the very definition of modernity. So embracing the life of a shepherd in the countryside would be not so much an escape from modern thinking but rather a particular expression of it. You are a kindred spirit of Thoreau, Gauguin and Rousseau. Any solution would have to come
    from within the resources of modernity itself rather than in an imagined rejection of it, which is only an opposition within the frame of modernity.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    So art, tragedies, copy an action and is imitative that way. Not ideals, but actions or plots. You're not imitating something that happened, you're constructing purposes for why they happened that way.Jackson

    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.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?

    In the modern world, with a lot more science at our disposal than Kant ever had in small-town Köningsberg, it's hard to remain Kantian.Hillary

    The modern scientific world was Kant’s world and the world of Einstein’s physics. The postmodern world is led by philosophy , with the sciences being slowly dragged into it kicking and screaming.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?


    Going back to ancient world. For Aristotle, sense perception (aesthesis) cannot take place without the imagination (phantasia).(De Anima). So we can imagine things without sensing them, but cannot perceive things without the imagination.Jackson

    Art for Aristotle is a representation of ideals, but artists must accurately portray reality to be successful, so overall it is mimetic, and that attitude toward art remained up through the 1700’s.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Art has always been about how things are perceived. No one invented that.Jackson

    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.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Starting from impressionism the progression was basically > post-impressionism > cubism. If you're saying there's a "new theory" behind each of these stages, what are they?praxis

    Impressionism recognized the inter penetration of the elements of a visual scene. That’s what made their depiction of color so much more vibrant than the Romantics. They discovered that each colored space
    is a mix of every color of the rainbow because of the way differently colored objects in a scene bleed their colors into each other. As Cezanne showed, the same is true of the way shapes that interact change and influence each other in our perception of them. So the impressionists were beginning to take seriously the contribution of the perceiver to what is perceived. With the ensuing waves of abstraction in art, these insights extended to include bodily positioning ( Degas) emotions and in general the full subjectivity of the perceiver(Van Gogh, Munch, Pollack, Rothko).
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Because the geometry of a picture plane was new. Using the abstract math of architecture was a new thingJackson

    You sound more like an engineer than an artist. What philosophical and scientific innovation made it new? Could it have been Descartes’ , Galileo and Newton’s discoveries of a rational, clockwork universe, amenable to mathematical description?
    What philosophical discoveries threatened Descartes’ and Newton’s vision of a rational machine-like universe directly apprehended by human reason?
    And what movements within the art world expressed this critique of the clockwork universe?
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Art is about the sensual.Jackson

    How does the sensual appear in DaVinci’s Last Supper and why is the perspective such a spectacularly powerful element of the drama?
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Thanks Joshs. Not sure I recognise the significance of these two ideas. Are you able to briefly describe how this Kantian stage actually plays out in art with an example?Tom Storm

    I 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 , divine truth of a scene is in its deep categorical structure.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Vision is a function of the technical. Nothing to do with "reshuffling."Jackson

    The technical has to do with the applied, and the applied is a reshuffling within an extant theoretical edifice. Steve Jobs introduced brilliant technical innovations but added nothing to the existing scientific theory underlying
    it. Great art isn’t just application of extant theory, it is the creation of new theory, a new vision.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Cubist paintings took the idea of frontal, optical perception and created a geometry of the picture plane. A cube is a spatial object--a die--that when looked at does not show its back.

    So, cubism is about how the picture plane is presented.
    Jackson

    You’ve explained what it is but not why it is. What changes in the way artists see and feel the world was it trying to convey? Significant movements in art are not about merely reshuffling old technical concepts but offering a new vision.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    He had a digital idea of perception much like today.Jackson

    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? That his thinking still stands at the cutting edge of contemporary ideas? Or are you arguing that only certain details of his thought are still relevant in this post-modern age?
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    No offense, but I never read stuff just because someone posts it quoting someone. Make an argumentJackson

    Here’s an argument. It is well documented that many dealers, critics and artists found strong consonances between Kant’s ideas and modern art, particularly Cubism. Why did they think this? Let’s begin with the question , what changes in philosophical worldview were required in order for visual artists to make the transition from realist pictorial representation to the various phases and modes of abstraction that began to proliferate in the 20th century? 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.

    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.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?


    From Mark Chatham:

    “ The well-documented references to Immanuel Kant in the literature surrounding the advent and ongoing critical reception of Cubism are a paradigm of issues in word-image studies. Given that Kant's texts and ideas might seem an unlikely inspiration for artists and critics of a new art movement - even in his own lifetime, the Critiques, though not all his writings, were notorious for their technical difficulty, and the Critique of Judgment purposefully provides little direct commentary on the arts - how should we understand their remarkable influence within the visual arts generally and around Cubism especially? Kant's name was dropped1 with notable regularity in France during the formative years of Cubism. Many of the most prominent critics and art dealers of the time employed his terminology and concepts, putatively to explain what was widely perceived as a new and radical artform and certainly also to garner the authority any reference to the philosopher seemed to bestow on their views of Cubism.

    Less often, Kant's name was invoked by artists to the same ends. But these references to Kant were not univocal and in fact divided contemporary commentators. Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler - the most important dealer and historian of Cubism in the early part of this century, a man who represented in the broadest and most influential ways the work of Braque, Gris, and Picasso until the beginning of the First World War - encapsulated the power of the Kantian interpretive frame to which he was a convert when he claimed that Cubism's ‘new language has given painting an unprecedented freedom coloured planes, through their direction and relative position, can bring together the formal scheme without uniting in closed forms .... Instead of an analytical description, the painter can. ... also create in this way a synthesis of the object, or in the words of Kant, “put together the various conceptions and comprehend their variety in our perception”’ (1949, p. 12).2 Kahnweiler read Kant and Neo-Kantian texts by Wilhelm Wundt, Heinrich Rickert, and others in Bern from 1914 to 1920, during his exile from France because of his German patrimony (Gehlen, 1966).

    For him, the analytic/synthetic distinction, the notions of the thing-in-itself and disinterestedness, and the formal autonomy of the work of art provided nothing less than a way of conceptualizing and justifying Cubism. Kant's ideas and terminology were also crucial for several of the central French critics who helped to define Cubism in its early years. Léonce Rosenberg, Pierre Reverdy, and especially Maurice Raynal used Kant to present and lend weight to their vision of Cubism as a breakthrough to essential reality as well as the paradigmatic art of autonomy, of personal as well as aesthetic freedom. These and other commentators used Kant recurrently to articulate what has come to be known as a ‘conceptualist’ or ‘idealist’ reading of Cubism, one that underlines its departure from the appearance of things and movement towards the comprehension of a supposedly more profound reality (Crowther, 1987; Nash, 1980). In 1912, the critic Olivier-Hourcade expressed a variant on this view - and the complexity of its provenance3 - by citing approvingly a well-known reference to Kant made by Schopenhauer: ‘The greatest service Kant ever rendered is the distinction between the phenomena and the thing in itself, between that which appears and that which is ... ’ (Fry, 1966, p. 74). On this interpretation, the Cubists present what they conceive, not what they see.“
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    What is that exactly?Jackson

    Recognizing that thoughts without content are empty, intuitions without concepts are blind. This is a realization you will not find in Descartes through Hume.
  • What is it to be called Kantian?
    Pretty good summary of Kant. And I don't agree with Kant at allJackson

    I dont agree with any philosophers, but I think they all have valid ideas. Put differently , I think the history of philosophy can be understood as a development (although not causally linear or cumulative) in which newer philosophies subsume the essence of earlier ones. And I think that this is true of all creative modalities. The philosophy , arts, literature , politics and sciences of an era are variations of a theme , a series of interconnected worldviews, and that theme evolves. It a not a question of a philosophy or worldview being right or wrong ( they are all ‘right’ initially to the extent that they are pragmatically useful, and then found to be ‘wrong’ when they are superseded by the next era of thinking). It was not just philosophers or art critics who embraced Kant, it was also artists , whether they read him or not.
    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.
  • How May Nietzsche's Idea of 'Superman' Be Understood ?
    I still don’t know what his theory of art is. Can you explain it?

    Regarding aesthetics, people have been having sublime aesthetic experiences and transcending the duality of good and evil for thousands of years.
    praxis

    One can’t understand his theory of art without first understanding his larger philosophical project, becuase the two are co-determinative.

    Do you think Nietzsche’s ideas as a whole have been absorbed, at least by most atheistic thinkers?
    — Joshs

    I sincerely hope
    praxis

    You said you sincerely hope his ideas have not been absorbed by today’s atheistic thinkers, which implies that you have an understanding of his philosophy of Will to Power. Can you summarize what it consists of?