It means art for arts sake. — Pop
We can make art about art and philosophize about philosophizing, or make art about philosophizing and philosophize about art. Use your imagination.
— praxis
So if I was to say the comment you just made is words about words - you would be satisfied? — Pop
It is rather that there is one, final context, and that is at the basic level, and this is phenomenology. On ethics and aesthetics: take lighted match and apply it to your finger. Now, there is a lot one can say about this anatomically, motivationally, psychologically, and any other context you can imagine; but put those aside and consider only the pain itself, pain simpliciter, qualia-pain if you like, or, the phenomenon of pain eidetically free, or context free. Forget about whether you think this is possible (Dennett doesn't, but that is another argument) for it being there AT ALL is a context, you can, and many do, including myself, argue. But IN this most foundational context of observing the pain just as pain and not of or in this or that, the pain can be seen most vividly for what it is, and not for what something tells us it is.
This presence is, I argue, pure, or close to pure. Entangled, yes, but here in this "reduction" it stands before one as a pure presence, what it IS as presence prior, that is, logically prior, for you can't even think of Hitler's genocidal cruelty without know what pain is to begin with that makes the whole affair so horrible.
This is what I have in mind. — Constance
This is true regarding the violinist, but notions such as art about art are so dim witted! :grimace: Similar to philosophy saying - life is about life, no more needs to be said! — Pop
The color is not in the object but on the object.
— Khalif
Supposing that humans didn't exist, would the colour red still be on the object ? — RussellA
IE, the aesthetic and Uniformity within Variety are both innate parts of the structure of the brain as Kantian a priori knowledge. — RussellA
Without a definition anybody can just BS about art as they please. — Pop
Phenomenologically: take the glee Hitler experienced as he gassed Jews. His glee is as a value experience is unassailable. It is simply a fact that he experienced this glee, say, and by itself, phenomenologically, that is, it is Good. What makes it bad is the context.
IE, in discussions about art, as with philosophy in general, communication can break down when different contributors attach different meanings to the same words. — RussellA
The aesthetic form of an object is independent of the object's context, as an object's aesthetic is the formal arrangement of the parts within the object, not any external context. — RussellA
take a relatively simple phenomenon and turn it into complete bullshit — T Clark
This is nonsensical. You cannot have an out-of-context experience.
— praxis
No. The context is taking up a thing apart from others. Kant did this with reason. It is not that Kant thought reason could be conceived independently of context, but that putting selected contexts at bay in order to give analysis to one feature is what analysis is all about. — Constance
An artist is free to choose the form of their art, including paint by numbers (which I think has been done) but the choice they make reveals their person - it reveals where their heads are at, so expresses their consciousness. It expresses how they think, what they have been influenced by, their attitudes to life - it expresses how information they have been shaped by has formed them - they in turn re-present this information in the form of their art. — Pop
Understanding the background - the context that the art is made in is important to understanding the art. In the instance you bring up, you understand the artist needs to make a buck, and so the work should be viewed in this light. The art is still information about the artists self organization? — Pop
The constant is the mind activity expressed in the form of the art. — Pop
It is simply a fact that he experienced this glee, say, and by itself, phenomenologically, that is, it is Good. What makes it bad is the context. — Constance
The good and the bad is not about guns, but about the bad or good that is embedded in experience. — Constance
... art is not some special feature, or assembly of features, but something we bring into the object as an object, Something, already there, in the structure of experience itself. — Constance
All observable things and their features can be art. — Constance
when I am in the presence of any object, even though all objects have a temperature, I am not always appreciating that object's temperature. — RussellA
Summary
Every observed object is an artwork and has an aesthetic, but the aesthetic value of some artworks is higher than others. — RussellA
Dewey held that as we live and breathe, we experience the world aesthetically, AS art, if you will. — Constance
From a Deweyan viewpoint, aesthetic experience, then, has roughly the following structure. The experience is set off by some factors, such as opening a book, directing a first glance at a painting, beginning to listen to a piece of music, entering a natural environment or a building, or beginning a meal or a conversation. As aesthetic experience is temporal, the material of the experience does not remain unchanged, but the elements initiating the experience, like reading the first lines of a book or hearing the first chord of a symphony, merge into new ones as the experience proceeds and complex relationships are formed between its past and newer phases. When these different parts form a distinctive kind of orderly developing unity that stands out from the general experiential stream of our lives, the experience in question is aesthetic.
Surely you're aware of the poor garden, so you're perceiving it. But in another sense, you aren't seeing it. — frank
The "artwork" lies in taking something AS art. But then the final question remains a mystery: what is it to take something as art? — Constance
The way I see it, the pothole in front of my house is a nuisance and an obstacle to my daily affairs … we forget it's art. It's a rug. — Constance
... the aesthetic is an integral part of experience itself ... everything already IS art. — Constance
… like pointing out that water is not dry. — javra
What is important is that there is a possibility they actually believe there's a spirit which is connected to a body. — Alkis Piskas
They were generally technical reports. They required as much of my creativity as the poetry I've written did. — T Clark
If your true nature is to be a Mahayani, yes. — baker
What a stupid and overdramatically grandiose OP!
Jeez,some of you need to get out more or look at the considerable motes in your own eyes.
Tim is watching too much TV and consuming too much American media.
Relax Timothy. — Ambrosia
