Not sure I understand. Are you putting Newton up as a philosopher? Sure. But what he did would not be considered philosophy now. Today's philosophy is an intellectual backwater. I guess I would make a possible exception for political philosophy. — T Clark
What? Sure the artist changes. Look at Radiohead - Pablo Honey vs. Amnesiac. — Noble Dust
But the circumstance of artist/audience/middle man doesn't change. I'm making this point because too often one of those three gets a distorted view of their role in the process. — Noble Dust
↪Thinker
You might know that to be true of yourself and perhaps those you are acquainted with, but how could you know it to be true of all of us? — John
Poetry doesn't have a goal. — Noble Dust
I say 50% because there's just two participants, fundamentally: artist and audience. Or, as mcdoogle pointed out, there's also the middle men of sorts; the record label, the art dealer, the money guy. So maybe 33% is better. — Noble Dust
You have a pretty high falutin vision of the importance of philosophers and artists, especially philosophers. None of us are "the voice behind the curtain." There isn't one. — T Clark
This is when the audience really puts in their 50% share of the work, and many different interpretations of a piece get made; people experience within many different contexts; a piece that transcends generations gets experienced in even wider (historical) contexts. — Noble Dust
I think both theists and atheists have gone beyond the strength of the available evidence.
— TheMadFool
Ironic. — Sapientia
I'm asking how art receives content or meaning, and as I've stated, I think the audience is 50% of the work, so all of these attempts by artists to define what they've done beforehand are not only unhelpful, but futile. — Noble Dust
Artists are the leaders of civilization.
— Thinker
Artists don't lead civilization, they ride on it. Excess wealth generated by centralized economic systems allows expenditures on things that are not directly related to food, shelter, and security. That doesn't say anything bad about art, but there's no doubt it, as an organized institution, is a luxury.
The paintings in the Lascaux cave are some of the most beautiful and moving things I've ever seen. It seems unlikely that whoever painted them had any concept of art or artists. Seems to me that art became a thing when cities came into existence. I have no evidence for that. — T Clark
My question really is whether you think someone's motivation determines the truth of what they say. Mathematicians enjoy mathematics, and of course that's why they do it. Finding an especially good result may make you especially happy, but the converse obviously does not hold.
There has been some controversy within philosophy in recent years about whether alternative points of view are suppressed by charging them with committing the genetic (and related) fallacies. I was wondering if you were taking a side here. — Srap Tasmaner
“A man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest”.
— Thinker
Did you? — John
However, for us mortals we are bound to our motivation – even in our quest for pure mathematics. We are caged, like rats, with our motivations and emotions. We cannot escape the gravity of our emotions.
— Thinker
Do you actually believe this, or were you just having a go at Sapientia? — Srap Tasmaner
Your point about emotions and motivation. My views, and everyone else's, are most likely affected to at least some extent by emotions and motivations. That isn't specific to my views on this topic. We aren't all Spock. None of us are, in fact. — Sapientia
Do you actually know what a straw man is? I don't think you do. — Sapientia
That is the topic - your antithesis is bound to your emotions and motivation. To dismiss this fact is a straw man.
— Thinker
That's not specific to this topic. — Sapientia
Okey dokey. Now, back to the topic... — Sapientia
Does the artist dictate what the audience should experience? Does the audience assign meaning to the work? — Noble Dust
Yes we can. I don't need to be Spock to be able to separate my feelings from my thoughts to the extent that I am able to avoid the fallacy of appealing to emotion. — Sapientia
Good for you, but this isn't the time or the place for that. This is a philosophy forum. If you want to share your feelings, but you're averse to critical thinking, then this probably isn't the right place for you. Try Facebook. — Sapientia
It's a silly question, so it deserves a silly answer. Yes, logic is my God. I worship it five times a day and pray to it whenever things don't go my way. Satisfied? — Sapientia
I don't need to prove the antithesis. — Sapientia
Try to play the ball, not the man. — Sapientia
There are many atheists who accept that there are conceptions of God which are logically possible. Atheism is defined primarily in terms of belief, rather than possibility. I am an atheist. I do not believe that God exists (unless you define "God" as something that I do believe exists, but that'd just be wordplay and sophistry). I also believe that God, according to some conceptions, does not exist, and according to some conceptions, can not exist. — Sapientia
The feminine intellect is well suited to lead “by quiet suggestion, long leashes, and technical and professional quality”. I wish we, as a society, could see the values inherent in the feminine intellect. — Thinker
Here, let me try to clarify my point. If one male had experiences with women who are mostly gentle, then in his mind a stereotype may have formed that all women must be gentle. It is not true, hence my statement that it is incorrect to assume such a thing. If I may offer yet another example, many assume that because of my smaller being that I am incapable of doing activities such as combat fighting and flying an aircraft. I do those things, so I know as fact that there are other women who also do these things and are not mostly gentle. — Lone Wolf
Great leaders can both tolerate innovation and manage the long run.
<1% for great leaders; maybe 2% or 3% for very good leaders; 50% for adequate leaders and 25% for tolerably, but poor leaders, and 21% for leaders who end up destroying organizational resources. — Bitter Crank
As one saying goes, men are stupid and women are crazy. But women are mostly crazy because men are stupid — Lone Wolf