and organized his observations into a consistent world-view - all without classifying his observations with words
The beauty in a work of art pushes past our "fixed meanings" as it enables the free play of our imagination and it, the creation of new concepts.
For oppression makes a wise man mad, And a bribe corrupts the heart. 8 The end of a matter is better than its beginning; Patience of spirit is better than haughtiness of spirit. 9 Do not be eager in your heart to be angry, For anger resides in the bosom of fools. 10 Do not say, "Why is it that the former days were better than these?" For it is not from wisdom that you ask about this. 11 Wisdom along with an inheritance is good And an advantage to those who see the sun. 12 For wisdom is protection just as money is protection, But the advantage of knowledge is that wisdom preserves the lives of its possessors.
But could it not then just be the case that my experience-orb really is just 'ontologically private', it really is completely cut off from everything, or nothing lays beyond, and I've just mentally structured my own experience in such a way as to generate an experience of others. So I have these perceptions and experience, and I mentally identify myself with a particular part of it, or you could say I structure my experience so it is in a particular mode (of say, being this body, within this external public space), which, due to my natural inclination to by analogy mentally place other 'windows upon the world' into the eyes of humans around me, causes my visual field - the world around me - to be experienced as public?
I think these experiences work by doing something to impair our normal sensory processing and mental schema of reality that allows us to perceive the really real that is always there
I don't know. Can we play with the definition of truth like that? It's odd how the paradox depends on fixed meanings of truth and fiction and your solution tweaks them.
What I mean here is that there is no interest extraneous to the work, which makes the work beautiful.
— Cavacava
I'm not sure how an "interest" would make a work beautiful, but isn't context something extraneous to the work that makes it beautiful, as you say bellow, more or less?
Yes, there no single correct interpretation of a work of art, but some interpretations are better informed than others and several interpretations may share similar points.
— Cavacava
Better informed about what? If there are lower and higher levels of being informed (education, if you will), does that mean there can only be better informed and less informed interpretations of art? If so, how would that matter if no interpretation is "correct"? What's the value of being better informed about a piece of art if there are no "wrong" interpretations? Why not just experience art without any information? I'm not sure you can have "no single correct interpretation", but then also have a hierarchy of interpretations. The hierarchy suggests an underlying objective value; "no right [and therefore no wrong] interpretations" doesn't suggest value beyond the subjectivity of the individual interpretation.
We, the observers are as necessary as the artist, as the work, as the whole history of art.
— Cavacava
Yeah, again, i've made that point on this forum for awhile now. I'm not sure how it's a response to my question about beauty being it's own referent.
If it had a purpose then it could not be beautiful, because what is beautiful must be beautiful as such with no ulterior motive or interest beyond itself as it is.
But what fascinates, what sets our imagination on fire is the work it self (not its context but certainly its contents)
— Cavacava
What? How can you say the audience is as important as the artist, and then say that context is not as important as content?
Since all experiences are different there is no single correct interpretation as I said previously and as I think we have discussed in the past the experience of a work of art depends on how in tune one is with the work.
— Cavacava
Wait, so which is it, according to you? Is there no single correct interpretation of a work, or does "how in tune one is with the work" determine the interpretation?
The question, for instance, of why Cooper's face is super-imposed on this scene, and eventually says "we live inside a dream" at half-speed, is a question that's never resolved in the show. What this scene does is create a mood, and a general feeling of nausea, which is definitely a theme in the last two episodes of the show.
This brings up an interesting philosophical problem: does art reflect reality? Should it? Does art carry an intrinsic message?
An analysis of data in Illinois has found a link between higher county-level use of an herbicide called glyphosate and reduced abundance of adult monarch butterflies, especially in areas with concentrated agriculture.
To be a performance artist, you have to hate theater,". "Theater is fake… The knife is not real, the blood is not real, and the emotions are not real. Performance is just the opposite: the knife is real, the blood is real, and the emotions are real."
What would be the difference between possessing and not possessing "human nature?"
takes into consideration the relative costs of local goods and services produced in a country valued at prices of the United States. It factors in exchange rates and the inflation rates of each country. Further, GDP at PPP reflects the purchasing power of a citizen in one country to a citizen of another. For example, a pair of shoes may cost less in one country than another, so purchasing power parity is needed for fairness in the calculation.
GDP (PPP) measures what that money can actually buy.
gross domestic product (at purchasing power parity) per capita, i.e., the purchasing power parity (PPP) value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given year, divided by the average (or mid-year) population for the same year.
Third to China and the EU, GDP (PPP); The Marshal Plan is over, but one belt, one road has just started. The USA can do its own dirty work.