Aesthetics (
also
spelled æsthetics or
esthetics) is a branch of philosophy dealing with
the nature of beauty, art, and taste, and with the creation and
appreciation of beauty. It is more scientifically defined as the
study of
sensory or sensori-emotional values,
sometimes called
judgments of
sentiment and
taste. More broadly, scholars in the field
define aesthetics as "critical reflection on
art,
culture and
nature." Aesthetics is a subdiscipline of
axiology, a branch of
philosophy, and is closely associated with the
philosophy of
art. Aesthetics studies new ways
of seeing and of perceiving the world.
Etymology
The term
esthetics 1790-, derives from the
German ästhetisch (Alexander
Baumgarten, c. 1750) or the
French
esthétique, both derived from the
Greek αισθητικός (aisthetikos)
"esthetic-sensitive-sentient", from
αίσθηση-αισθάνομαι
(aisthese-aisthanomai) "to perceive-feel-sense"
Aesthetic judgment
Judgments of aesthetic value rely on our ability to discriminate at
a sensory level. Aesthetics examines our affective domain response
to an object or phenomenon.
Immanuel
Kant, writing in 1790, observes of a man "If he says that
canary wine is agreeable he is quite content if someone else
corrects his terms and reminds him to say instead: It is agreeable
to
me," because "Everyone has his own (
sense of)
taste". The case of
"beauty" is different from mere "agreeableness" because, "If he
proclaims something to be beautiful, then he requires the same
liking from others; he then judges not just for himself but for
everyone, and speaks of beauty as if it were a property of
things."
Aesthetic judgments usually go beyond sensory discrimination. For
David Hume, delicacy of taste is not
merely "the ability to detect all the ingredients in a
composition", but also our sensitivity "to pains as well as
pleasures, which escape the rest of mankind." (Essays Moral
Political and Literary. Indianapolis, Literary Classics 5, 1987.)
Thus, the sensory discrimination is linked to capacity for
pleasure. For
Kant
"enjoyment" is the result when pleasure arises from sensation, but
judging something to be
"beautiful" has a third requirement: sensation must give rise to
pleasure by engaging our capacities of reflective contemplation.
Judgments of beauty are sensory, emotional and intellectual all at
once.
Viewer interpretations of beauty possess two concepts of value:
aesthetics and taste. Aesthetics is the philosophical notion of
beauty. Taste is a result of
education and
awareness of elite cultural values; therefore taste can be learned.
Taste varies according to
class,
cultural background, and education. According to Kant, beauty is
objective and universal; thus certain things are beautiful to
everyone. The contemporary view of beauty is not based on innate
qualities, but rather on cultural specifics and individual
interpretations.
What factors are involved in an aesthetic judgment?
Judgments of aesthetic value seem often to involve many other kinds
of issues as well. Responses such as disgust show that sensory
detection is linked in
instinctual ways to
facial expressions, and even
behaviors like the
gag reflex. Yet
disgust can often be a learned or cultural issue too; as Darwin
pointed out, seeing a stripe of soup in a man's beard is disgusting
even though neither
soup nor
beards are themselves disgusting. Aesthetic judgments
may be linked to emotions or, like emotions, partially embodied in
our physical reactions. Seeing a
sublime view of a landscape may give us
a reaction of
awe, which might manifest
physically as an increased heart rate or widened eyes. These
unconscious reactions may even be partly constitutive of what makes
our judgment a judgment that the landscape is sublime.
Likewise, aesthetic judgments may be culturally conditioned to some
extent.
Victorian in Britain often saw
African sculpture as ugly, but
just a few decades later,
Edwardian
audiences saw the same sculptures as being beautiful. The Abuse of
Beauty, Evaluations of beauty may well be linked to desirability,
perhaps even to
sexual desirability.
Thus, judgments of
aesthetic
value can become linked to judgments of
economic,
political, or
moral value. We might judge a
Lamborghini to be beautiful partly because it is
desirable as a status symbol, or we might judge it to be repulsive
partly because it signifies for us over-consumption and offends our
political or moral values.
"Part and Parcel in Animal and Human Societies". in Studies in
animal and human behavior, vol. 2. pp. 115–195. Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard UP, 1971 (originally pub. 1950.)Aesthetic judgments
can often be very fine-grained and internally contradictory.
Likewise aesthetic judgments seem often to be at least partly
intellectual and interpretative. It is what a thing means or
symbolizes for us that is often what we are judging. Modern
aestheticians have asserted that
will and
desire were almost dormant in
aesthetic experience, yet
preference and
choice have seemed important aesthetics to
some 20th century thinkers. The point is already made by
Hume, but see Mary Mothersill, "Beauty and the
Critic’s Judgment", in The Blackwell Guide to Aesthetics, 2004.
Thus aesthetic judgments might be seen to be based on the senses,
emotions, intellectual opinions, will, desires, culture,
preferences, values, subconscious behavior, conscious decision,
training, instinct, sociological institutions, or some complex
combination of these, depending on exactly which theory one
employs.
Anthropology, especially the
savanna hypothesis proposed
by
Gordon Orians and others, predicts
that some of the positive aesthetics that people have are based on
innate knowledge of productive human habitats. It had been shown
that people prefer and feel happier looking at trees with spreading
forms much more than looking at trees with other forms, or non-tree
objects; also Bright
green colors, linked with
healthy plants with good nutrient qualities, were more calming than
other tree colors, including less bright greens and oranges.
Are different art forms beautiful, disgusting, or boring in the
same way?
A third major topic in the study of aesthetic judgments is how they
are unified across art forms. We can call a person, a house, a
symphony, a fragrance, and a
mathematical proof beautiful. What
characteristics do they share which give them that status? What
possible feature could a proof and a fragrance both share in virtue
of which they both count as beautiful? What makes a painting
beautiful is quite different from what makes music beautiful, which
suggests that each art form has its own language for the judgement
of aesthetics.
At the same time, there is seemingly quite a lack of words to
express oneself accurately when making an aesthetic judgement. An
aesthetic judgement cannot be an empirical judgement. Therefore,
due to impossibility for precision, there is confusion about what
interpretations can be culturally negotiated. Due to imprecision in
the standard English language, two completely different feelings
experienced by two different people can be represented by an
identical verbal expression. Wittgenstein stated this in his
lectures on aesthetics and language games.
A collective identification of beauty, with willing participants in
a given social spectrum, may be a socially negotiated phenomenon,
discussed in a culture or context. Is there some underlying unity
to aesthetic judgment and is there some way to articulate the
similarities of a beautiful house, beautiful proof, and beautiful
sunset? Defining it requires a description of the entire
phenomenon, as Wittgenstein argued in his lectures on aesthetics.
Likewise there has been long debate on how perception of beauty in
the natural world, especially perception of the human form as
beautiful, is supposed to relate to perceiving beauty in
art or
artefacts. This
goes back at least to Kant, with some echoes even in St.
Bonaventure.
Aesthetics and the philosophy of art
Aesthetics is used by some as a synonym for the philosophy of
art, while others insist on a distinction
between these closely related fields. In practice aesthetic
judgement refers to the sensory contemplation or appreciation of an
object (not necessarily an
art object),
while artistic judgement refers to the recognition, appreciation or
criticism of art or an
art work.
What is "art?"
How best to define the term “art” is a subject of constant
contention; many books and journal articles have been published
arguing over even the basics of what we mean by the term “art”.
Theodor Adorno claimed in 1969 “It is
self-evident that nothing concerning art is self-evident.” Artists,
philosophers, anthropologists, psychologists and programmers all
use the notion of art in their respective fields, and give it
operational definitions that vary considerably. Furthermore, it is
clear that even the basic meaning of the term "
art" has changed several times over the centuries, and
has continued to evolve during the 20th century as well.
The main recent sense of the word “art” is roughly as an
abbreviation for
creative art or
“
fine art.” Here we mean that skill is
being used to express the artist’s creativity, or to engage the
audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards
consideration of the “finer” things. Often, if the skill is being
used in a functional object, people will consider it a
craft instead of art, a suggestion which is highly
disputed by many
Contemporary Craft
thinkers. Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or
industrial way it may be considered
design
instead of art, or contrariwise these may be defended as art forms,
perhaps called
applied art. Some
thinkers, for instance, have argued that the difference between
fine art and applied art has more to do with the actual function of
the object than any clear definitional difference. Art usually
implies no function other than to convey or communicate an
idea.
Even as late as 1912 it was normal in the West to assume that all
art aims at beauty, and thus that anything that wasn't trying to be
beautiful couldn't count as art. The
cubists,
dadaists,
Stravinsky, and many later art movements
struggled against this conception that beauty was central to the
definition of art, with such success that, according to
Danto, "Beauty had disappeared not only from the
advanced art of the 1960’s but from the advanced philosophy of art
of that decade as well." Perhaps some notion like "expression" (in
Croce’s theories) or
"counter-environment" (in
McLuhan’s
theory) can replace the previous role of beauty.
Brian Massumi brought back "beauty" into
consideration together with "expression". Another concept, as
important to the philosophy of art as "beauty," is that of the
"sublime," elaborated upon in the twentieth century by the
postmodern philosopher
Jean-Francois Lyotard.
Perhaps (as in
Kennick's theory) no
definition of art is possible anymore. Perhaps art should be
thought of as a cluster of related concepts in a
Wittgensteinian fashion (as in
Weitz or
Beuys).
Another approach is to say that “art” is basically a sociological
category, that whatever art schools and museums and artists define
as art is considered art regardless of formal definitions. This
"institutional definition of art" (see also
Institutional Critique) has been
championed by
George Dickie. Most
people did not consider the depiction of a
Brillo
Box or a store-bought
urinal
to be art until
Andy Warhol and
Marcel Duchamp (respectively) placed them in
the context of art (i.e., the
art
gallery), which then provided the association of these objects
with the associations that define art.
Proceduralists often suggest that it is the process by which a work
of art is created or viewed that makes it art, not any inherent
feature of an object, or how well received it is by the
institutions of the art world after its introduction to society at
large. Whereas if exactly the same set of words was written by a
journalist, intending them as shorthand notes to help him write a
longer article later, these would not be a poem.
Leo Tolstoy, on the other hand, claims that what
makes something art or not is how it is experienced by its
audience, not by the intention of its creator. Functionalists like
Monroe Beardsley argue that whether
or not a piece counts as art depends on what function it plays in a
particular context; the same Greek vase may play a non-artistic
function in one context (carrying wine), and an artistic function
in another context (helping us to appreciate the beauty of the
human figure). '
See also:
Classificatory disputes about
art
What should we judge when we judge art?
Art can be difficult at the metaphysical and
ontological levels as well as at the
value theory level. When we see a performance
of
Hamlet, how many works of art are
we experiencing, and which should we judge? Perhaps there is only
one relevant work of art, the whole performance, which many
different people have contributed to, and which will exist briefly
and then disappear. Perhaps the manuscript by Shakespeare is a
distinct work of art from the play by the troupe, which is also
distinct from the performance of the play by this troupe on this
night, and all three can be judged, but are to be judged by
different standards.
Perhaps every person involved should be judged separately on his or
her own merits, and each costume or line is its own work of art
(with perhaps the director having the job of unifying them all).
Similar problems arise for music, film and even painting. Is one to
judge the painting itself, the work of the painter, or perhaps the
painting in its context of presentation by the museum
workers?
These problems have been made even more difficult by the rise of
conceptual art since the 1960s.
Warhol’s famous
Brillo Boxes are nearly
indistinguishable from actual Brillo boxes at the time. It would be
a mistake to praise Warhol for the design of his boxes (which were
designed by Steve Harvey), yet the conceptual move of exhibiting
these boxes as art in a museum together with other kinds of
paintings is Warhol's. Are we judging Warhol’s concept? His
execution of the concept in the medium? The
curator’s insight in letting Warhol display the
boxes? The overall result? Our experience or interpretation of the
result? Ontologically, how are we to think of the work of art? Is
it a physical object? Several objects? A class of objects? A mental
object? A fictional object? An
abstract
object? An event? Or simply an Act?
What should art be like?
Many goals have been argued for art, and aestheticians often argue
that some goal or another is superior in some way.
Clement Greenberg, for instance, argued in
1960 that each artistic medium should seek that which makes it
unique among the possible mediums and then purify itself of
anything other than expression of its own uniqueness as a form. The
Dadaist Tristan
Tzara on the other hand saw the function of art in 1918 as the
destruction of a mad social order. “We must sweep and clean. Affirm
the cleanliness of the individual after the state of madness,
aggressive complete madness of a world abandoned to the hands of
bandits.” Formal goals, creative goals, self-expression, political
goals, spiritual goals, philosophical goals, and even more
perceptual or aesthetic goals have all been popular pictures of
what art should be like.
The value of art
Tolstoy defined art, and not incidentally characterized its value,
this way: "Art is a human activity consisting in this, that one man
consciously, by means of certain external signs, hands on to others
feelings he has lived through, and that other people are infected
by these feelings and also experience them."
The value of art, then, is one with the value of empathy.
Other possible views are these: Art can act as a means to some
special kind of knowledge. Art may give insight into the human
condition. Art relates to
science and
religion. Art serves as a tool of
education, or indoctrination, or enculturation. Art makes us more
moral. It uplifts us spiritually. Art is politics by other means.
Art has the value of allowing
catharsis.
In any case, the value of art may determine the suitability of an
art form. Do they differ significantly in their values, or (if not)
in their ability to achieve the unitary value of art?
But to approach the question of the value of art systematically,
one ought to ask: for whom? For the artist? For the audience? For
society at large, and/or for individuals beyond the audience? Is
the "value" of art different in each of these different
contexts?
Working on the intended value of art tends to help define the
relations between art and other acts. Art clearly does have
spiritual goals in many contexts, but what exactly is the
difference between religious art and religion
per se? The
truth is complex - Art is both useless in a functional sense and
the most important human activity.
It has been said, that a
Vogon Starship
arriving at the earth and ordering its destruction would ask what
use is humanity? The only justification humanity could give would
be a Shakespeare play, a Rembrandt or a Bach concerto. These are
the things of value which define humanity itself.
Aesthetic universals
The philosopher
Denis Dutton identified
seven universal signatures in human aesthetics:
- Expertise or virtuosity. Technical artistic skills are
cultivated, recognized, and admired.
- Nonutilitarian pleasure. People enjoy art for art's sake, and
don't demand that it keep them warm or put food on the table.
- Style. Artistic objects and performances satisfy rules of
composition that place them in a recognizable style.
- Criticism. People make a point of judging, appreciating, and
interpreting works of art.
- Imitation. With a few important exceptions like music and
abstract painting, works of art simulate experiences of the
world.
- Special focus. Art is set aside from ordinary life and made a
dramatic focus of experience.
- Imagination. Artists and their audiences entertain hypothetical
worlds in the theater of the imagination.
It might be objected, however, that there are rather too many
exceptions to Dutton's categories. For example, the installations
of the contemporary artist
Thomas
Hirschhorn deliberately eschew technical virtuosity. People can
appreciate a Renaissance Madonna for aesthetic reasons, but such
objects often had (and sometimes still have) specific devotional
functions. 'Rules of composition' that might be read into
Duchamp's
Fountain or
John Cage's
4'33" do
not locate the works in a recognizable style (or certainly not a
style recognizable at the time of the works' realisation).
Moreover, some of Dutton's categories seem too broad: a physicist
might entertain hypothetical worlds in his/her imagination in the
course of formulating a theory.
Increasingly, academics in both the sciences and the humanities are
looking to
evolutionary
psychology and
cognitive
science in an effort to understand the connection between
psychology and aesthetics. Aside from
Dutton,
others exploring this realm include
Brian
Boyd,
Noel Carroll, Ellen
Dissanayake, Nancy Easterlin,
David
Evans, Jonathan Gottschall, Paul Hernadi,
Bracha Ettinger,
Patrick Hogan,
Elaine
Scarry,
Christine
Buci-Glucksmann, Wendy Steiner, Robert Storey,
Frederick Turner, and
Mark Turner.
Criticism
The philosophy of aesthetics has been criticized by some
sociologists and writers about art and society.
Raymond Williams argues that there is no
unique aesthetic object but a continuum of cultural forms from
ordinary speech to experiences that are signaled as art by a frame,
institution or special event.
Pierre
Bourdieu also takes issue with Kant's aesthetics and argues
that it represents an experience that is the product of an elevated
class habitus and scholarly leisure.
History of aesthetics
Ancient aesthetics
We have examples of
pre-historic
art, but they are rare, and the context of their production and
use is not very clear, so we can little more than guess at the
aesthetic doctrines that guided their production and
interpretation.
Ancient art was largely, but not entirely, based
on the seven great ancient civilizations: Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Greece, Rome, Persia,
India and China
. Each
of these centers of early civilization developed a unique and
characteristic style in its art. Greece had the most influence on
the development of aesthetics in the West. This period of Greek art
saw a veneration of the human physical form and the development of
corresponding skills to show musculature, poise, beauty and
anatomically correct proportions. Furthermore, in many Western and
Eastern cultures alike, traits such as body hair are rarely
depicted in art that addresses physical beauty. More in contrast
with this Greek-Western aesthetic taste is the genre of
grotesque.
Greek philosophers initially felt
that aesthetically appealing objects were beautiful in and of
themselves.
Plato felt that beautiful objects
incorporated proportion,
harmony, and unity
among their parts. Similarly, in the
Metaphysics,
Aristotle found that the universal elements of
beauty were order,
symmetry, and
definiteness.
Islamic aesthetics
Islamic art is not, properly speaking,
an art pertaining to religion only. The term "
Islamic" refers not only to the religion, but to any
form of art created in an
Islamic
culture or in an Islamic context. It would also be a mistake to
assume that all
Muslims are in agreement on
the use of art in religious observance, the proper place of art in
society, or the relation between secular art and the demands placed
on the secular world to conform to religious precepts. Islamic art
frequently adopts secular elements and elements that are frowned
upon, if not forbidden, by some
Islamic
theologians.
According to Islam, human works of art are inherently flawed
compared to the work of God; thus, it is believed by many that to
attempt to depict in a realistic form any animal or person is
insolence to God. This tendency has had the effect of narrowing the
field of artistic possibility to such forms of art as
Arabesque,
mosaic,
Islamic calligraphy, and
Islamic architecture, as well as more
generally any form of abstraction that can claim the status of
non-representational art.
The limited possibilities has been explored by artists as an outlet
to artistic expression, and has been cultivated to become a
positive style and tradition, emphasizing the decorative function
of art, or its religious functions via non-representational forms
such as Geometric patterns, floral patterns, and
arabesques.
Human or animal depiction is generally forbidden altogether in
Islamic cultures. Human portrayals can be found in early Islamic
cultures with varying degrees of acceptance by religious
authorities. Human representation for the purpose of worship that
is uniformly considered
idolatry as
forbidden in
Sharia law. There are
many
depictions of Muhammad,
Islam's chief prophet, in historical
Islamic art.
The calligraphic arts grew out an effort to devote oneself to the
study of the Koran. By patiently transcribing each word of the
text, the writer was made to contemplate the meaning of it. As time
passed, these calligraphic works began to be prized as works of
art, growing increasingly elaborate in the illumination and
stylizing of the text. These illuminations were applied to other
works besides the Koran, and it became a respected art form in and
of itself.
Indian aesthetics
Indian art evolved with an emphasis on
inducing special spiritual or philosophical states in the audience,
or with representing them symbolically. According to
Kapila Vatsyayan, "Classical
Indian architecture,
sculpture,
painting,
literature (
kāvya),
music, and
dancing evolved their own rules conditioned by
their respective media, but they shared with one another not only
the underlying spiritual beliefs of the Indian religio-philosophic
mind, but also the procedures by which the relationships of the
symbol and the spiritual states were worked out in detail."
Of particular concern to Indian drama and literature is the term
rasa referring generally
to the emotional flavors crafted into the work by the writer and
relished by a 'sensitive spectator' or
sahṛdaya. Poets
like
Kālidāsa were attentive to
rasa, which blossomed into a fully developed aesthetic system. Even
in contemporary India the term
rasa denoting "flavor" is
used colloquially to describe the aesthetic experiences in films;
"māsala mix" describes popular Hindi cinema films which serve a
balanced emotional meal, savored as rasa by the spectator.
Rasa theory blossoms beginning with the
Sanskrit text
Nātyashāstra (
nātya meaning
"drama" and
shāstra meaning "science of"), a work
attributed to
Bharata Muni where the
Gods declare that drama is the 'Fifth Veda' because it is suitable
for the degenerate age as the best form of religious instruction.
While the date of composition varies wildly among scholars, ranging
from the era of
Plato and
Aristotle to the seventh century CE. The
Nātyashāstra presents the aesthetic concepts of rasas and their
associated bhāvas in Chapters Six and Seven respectively, which
appear to be independent of the work as a whole. Eight rasas and
associated bhāvas are named and their enjoyment is likened to
savoring a meal: rasa is the enjoyment of flavors that arise from
the proper preparation of ingredients and the quality of
ingredients. What rasa actually is, in a theoretical sense, is not
discussed and given the
Nātyashāstra's pithy wording it is
unlikely the exact understanding of the original author(s) will be
known.
The theory of the rasas develops significantly with the Kashmiri
aesthetician Ãndandavardhana's classic on poetics, the Dhvanyāloka
which introduces the ninth rasa, shānta-rasa as a specifically
religious feeling of peace (
śānta) which arises from its
bhāva, weariness of the pleasures of the world. The primary purpose
of this text is to refine the literary concept
dhvani or
poetic suggestion, by arguing for the existence of
rasa-dhvani, primarily in forms of Sanskrit including a
word, sentence or whole work "suggests" a real-world emotional
state or bhāva, but thanks to aesthetic distance, the sensitive
spectator relishes the rasa, the aesthetic flavor of tragedy,
heroism or romance.
The 9th - 10th century master of the religious system known as "the
nondual Shaivism of Kashmir" (or "Kashmir Shaivism") and
aesthetician,
Abhinavagupta brought
rasa theory to its pinnacle in his separate commentaries on the
Dhvanyāloka, the Dhvanyāloka-locana (translated by Ingalls, Masson
and Patwardhan, 1992) and the Abhinavabharati, his commentary on
the
Nātyashāstra, portions of
which are translated by Gnoli and Masson and Patwardhan.
Abhinavagupta offers for the first time a technical definition of
rasa which is the universal bliss of the Self or
Atman colored by the emotional tone of a drama.
Shānta-rasa functions as an equal member of the set of rasas but is
simultaneously distinct being the most clear form of aesthetic
bliss. Abhinavagupta likens it to the string of a jeweled necklace;
while it may not be the most appealing for most people, it is the
string that gives form to the necklace, allowing the jewels of the
other eight rasas to be relished. Relishing the rasas and
particularly shānta-rasa is hinted as being as-good-as but
never-equal-to the bliss of Self-realization experienced by
yogis.
Chinese aesthetics
Chinese art has a long history of varied
styles and emphases. In ancient times philosophers were already
arguing about aesthetics.
Confucius
emphasized the role of the arts and humanities (especially music
and poetry) in broadening human nature and aiding “li” (etiquette,
the rites) in bringing us back to what is essential about humanity.
His opponent
Mozi, however, argued that music
and fine arts were classist and wasteful, benefiting the rich but
not the common people.
By the 4th century A.D., artists were debating in writing over the
proper goals of art as well.
Gu Kaizhi has
3 surviving books on this theory of painting, for example, and it's
not uncommon to find later artist/scholars who both create art and
write about the creating of art. Religious and philosophical
influence on art was common (and diverse) but never universal; it
is easy to find art that largely ignores philosophy and religion in
almost every Chinese time period.
Sub-Saharan African aesthetics
Sub-Saharan
African art existed in many
forms and styles, and with fairly little influence from outside
Africa. Most of it followed traditional forms
and the aesthetic norms were handed down orally as well as written.
Sculpture and
performance art are prominent, and abstract
and partially abstracted forms are valued, and were valued long
before influence from the Western tradition began in earnest.
The
Nok
culture is
testimony to this. The mosque of Timbuktu
shows that
specific areas of Africa developed unique aesthetics.
Western medieval aesthetics
Surviving
medieval art is largely
religious in focus, and typically was funded by the
State,
Orthodox or
Roman Catholic church, powerful
ecclesiastical individuals, or wealthy secular patrons. Often the
pieces have an intended liturgical function, such as
chalices or
churches.
Medieval Art Objects were made from rare and valuable materials,
such as
Gold and
Lapis,
the cost of which was often superior to the wages of the
maker.
Art and aesthetic philosophy was a continuation of ancient lines of
thought, with the additional use of explicit theological
categories. St.
Bonaventure’s “Retracing
the Arts to Theology” discusses the skills of the artisan as gifts
given by God for the purpose of disclosing God to mankind via four
“lights”: the light of skill in mechanical arts which discloses the
world of artifacts, as guided by the light of sense perception
which discloses the world of natural forms, as guided by the light
of philosophy which discloses the world of intellectual truth, as
guided by the light of divine wisdom which discloses the world of
saving truth.
Saint Thomas Aquinas' aesthetic theory is arguably more famous and
influential among the medieval aesthetic theories, having been
explicitly used in the writing of the famous writer James Joyce as
well as many other influential 20th century authors. Thomas, as
with many of the other medievals, never explicitly gives an account
of "beauty" in itself, but the theory is reconstructed on the basis
of disparate comments in a wide array of works. His theory follows
the classical model of Aristotle, but with explicit formulation of
beauty as "pulchrum transcendentalis" or convertible with being
among the other "transcendentals" such as "truth" and "goodness."
Umberto Eco's
The Aesthetics of Thomas Aquinas identifies
the three main characteristics of beautiful things in Aquinas'
philosophy as: integritas, consonantia, and claritas. Aristotle
identifies the first two characteristics, with the third being an
"innovation" of Aquinas in the light of Platonic/neo-Platonic and
Augustinian thought. In sum, medieval aesthetic, while not a
unified system, presents a unique view of beauty that deserves an
in-depth treatment in the history of art.
As the medieval world shifts into the
Renaissance, art again returns to focus on this
world and on secular issues of human life. The philosophy of art of
the ancient Greeks and Romans is re-appropriated.
Modern aesthetics
From the late 17th to the early 20th century Western aesthetics
underwent a slow revolution into what is often called
modernism.
German
and British
thinkers emphasised beauty as
the key component of art and of the aesthetic experience, and saw
art as necessarily aiming at beauty.
For
Baumgarten
aesthetics is the science of the sense experiences, a younger
sister of logic, and beauty is thus the most perfect kind of
knowledge that sense experience can have. For
Kant the aesthetic experience of beauty is a
judgment of a subjective but universal truth, since all people
should agree that “this
rose is beautiful” if
it in fact is. However, beauty cannot be reduced to any more basic
set of features. For
Schiller
aesthetic appreciation of beauty is the most perfect reconciliation
of the sensual and rational parts of human nature.
For
Hegel all culture
is a matter of "absolute spirit" coming to be manifest to itself,
stage by stage. Art is the first stage in which the absolute spirit
is manifest immediately to sense-perception, and is thus an
objective rather than subjective revelation of beauty. For
Schopenhauer aesthetic contemplation of
beauty is the most free that the pure intellect can be from the
dictates of will; here we contemplate perfection of form without
any kind of worldly agenda, and thus any intrusion of utility or
politics would ruin the point of the beauty.
The British were largely divided into intuitionist and analytic
camps. The intuitionists believed that aesthetic experience was
disclosed by a single mental faculty of some kind. For the
Earl of Shaftesbury this was identical
to the moral sense, beauty just is the sensory version of moral
goodness. For Wittgenstein aesthetics consisted in the description
of a whole culture which is a linguistic impossibility. That which
constitutes aesthetics lies out side the realm of the language
game.
For
Hutcheson beauty
is disclosed by an inner mental sense, but is a subjective fact
rather than an objective one. Analytic theorists like
Lord Kames,
William
Hogarth, and
Edmund Burke hoped to
reduce beauty to some list of attributes. Hogarth, for example,
thinks that beauty consists of (1) fitness of the parts to some
design; (2) variety in as many ways as possible; (3) uniformity,
regularity or symmetry, which is only beautiful when it helps to
preserve the character of fitness; (4) simplicity or distinctness,
which gives pleasure not in itself, but through its enabling the
eye to enjoy variety with ease; (5) intricacy, which provides
employment for our active energies, leading the eye on "a wanton
kind of chase"; and (6) quantity or magnitude, which draws our
attention and produces admiration and awe. Later analytic
aestheticians strove to link beauty to some scientific theory of
psychology (such as
James Mill) or
biology (such as
Herbert
Spencer).
Post-modern aesthetics and psychoanalysis
Early twentieth century artists, poets and composers challenged the
assumption that beauty was central to art and aesthetics. Various
attempts have been made since then to define Post-modern
aesthetics.
This challenge, thought to be original, is actually continuous with
older aesthetic theory; Aristotle was the first in the Western
tradition to classify "beauty" into types as in his theory of
drama, and Kant made a distinction between beauty and the sublime.
What was new was a refusal to credit the higher status of certain
types, where the taxonomy implied a preference for tragedy and the
sublime to comedy and the Rococo.
Croce suggested that “expression” is
central in the way that beauty was once thought to be central.
George Dickie suggested that the
sociological institutions of the art world were the glue binding
art and sensibility into unities.
Marshall McLuhan suggested that art always
functions as a "counter-environment" designed to make visible what
is usually invisible about a society.
Theodor Adorno felt that aesthetics could not
proceed without confronting the role of the culture industry in the
commodification of art and aesthetic experience.
Hal Foster attempted to portray the
reaction against beauty and Modernist art in
The
Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture.
Arthur Danto has described this reaction as
"kalliphobia" (after the Greek word for beauty - 'kalos').
Brian Massumi suggests to reconsider
beauty following the aesthetical thought in the
philosophy of
Deleuze and
Guattari.
Daniel Berlyne created the field of
experimental aesthetics in the 1970s, for which he is still the
most cited individual decades after his death.
Jean-François Lyotard
re-invokes the Kantian distinction between
taste and the
sublime. Sublime painting, unlike
kitsch realism, "...will enable us to see
only by making it impossible to see; it will please only by causing
pain."
Sigmund Freud inaugurated aesthetical
thinking in
Psychoanalysis mainly via
the "Uncanny" as aesthetical affect. Following Freud and
Merleau-Ponty,
Jacques Lacan approached the aesthetical
object in the visual field by the notion of the
gaze as lacking and as phallic "objet a" that follows
the psychic "masculine" principle of separation and
castration.
Aesthetics and information
In the 1970s,
Abraham Moles and
Frieder Nake were among the first to
analyze links between aesthetics,
information processing, and
information theory .
In the 1990s,
Jürgen
Schmidhuber described an
algorithmic
theory of
beauty which takes the
subjectivity of the observer into account and
postulates: among several observations classified as comparable by
a given subjective observer, the aesthetically most pleasing one is
the one with the shortest description, given the observer’s
previous knowledge and his particular method for encoding the data.
This is closely related to the principles of
algorithmic information
theory and
minimum
description length. One of his examples:
mathematicians enjoy simple proofs with a
short description in their
formal
language. Another very concrete example describes an
aesthetically pleasing human face whose proportions can be
described by very few
bits of
information, drawing inspiration from less
detailed 15th century proportion studies by
Leonardo da Vinci and
Albrecht Dürer. Schmidhuber's theory
explicitly distinguishes between what's
beautiful and what's
interesting, stating that interestingness
corresponds to the
first derivative
of subjectively perceived
beauty. Here the
premise is that any observer continually tries to improve the
predictability and
compressibility of the observations by
discovering regularities such as repetitions and
symmetries and
fractal
self-similarity. Whenever the
observer's learning process (which may be a predictive
neural network - see also
Neuroesthetics) leads to improved data
compression such that the observation sequence can be described by
fewer
bits than before, the temporary
interestingness of the data corresponds to
the number of saved bits. This compression progress is proportional
to the observer's
internal reward, also called
curiosity reward. A
reinforcement learning algorithm is
used to maximize future expected reward by learning to execute
action sequences that cause additional
interesting input data with yet unknown but
learnable predictability or regularity. The principles can be
implemented on artificial agents which then exhibit a form of
artificial curiosity.
Applied aesthetics
As well as being applied to art aesthetics can also be applied to
cultural objects. Aesthetic coupling between art-objects and
medical topics was made by speakers working for the US Information
Agency This coupling was made to reinforce the learning paradigm
when English-language speakers used translators to address
audiences in their own country. These audiences were generally not
fluent in the English language. It can also be used in topics as
diverse as
mathematics,
gastronomy and
fashion
design.
Aesthetic ethics
Aesthetic ethics refers to the idea that human conduct and
behaviour ought to be governed by that which is beautiful and
attractive. John Dewey has pointed out that the unity of aesthetics
and ethics is in fact reflected in our understanding of behaviour
being "fair" - the word having a double meaning of attractive and
morally acceptable. More recently, James Page has suggested that
aesthetic ethics might be taken to form a philosophical rationale
for
peace education.
Truth as beauty, mathematics, analytic philosophy, and
physics
Mathematical considerations, such as
symmetry and
complexity,
are used for analysis in theoretical aesthetics. This is different
from the aesthetic considerations of
applied aesthetics used in the study of
mathematical beauty. Aesthetic
considerations such as
symmetry and
simplicity are used in areas of
philosophy, such as
ethics
and
theoretical physics and
cosmology to
define
truth, outside of
empirical considerations.
Beauty and
Truth have been
argued to be nearly synonymous.
Computational inference of aesthetics
Since about 2005, computer scientists have attempted to develop
automated methods to infer aesthetic quality of images. Large
number of manually-rated online photographs were used to "teach"
computers about what visual properties are of relevance to
aesthetic quality.
The Acquine engine, developed at Penn State
University
, rates natural photographs uploaded by
users.
Notable in this area is Michael Leyton, professor of psychology at
Rutgers University. Leyton is the president of the International
Society for Mathematical and Computational Aesthetics and
theInternational Society for Group Theory in Cognitive Science and
has developed a generative theory of shape.
See also
References
- Danto, Arthur (2003), The Abuse
of Beauty: Aesthetics and the Concept of Art.
- Davies, Stephen (1991),
Definitions of Art.
- Kelly, Michael (Editor in Chief) (1998) Encyclopedia of
Aesthetics. New York, Oxford, Oxford University Press. 4 voll.,
pp. XVII-521, pp. 555, pp. 536, pp. 572; 2224
total pages; 100 b/w photos; ISBN 978-0-19-511307-5. Covers
philosophical, historical, sociological, and biographical aspects
of Art and Aesthetics worldwide.
- Novitz, David (1992), The
Boundaries of Art.
Further reading
The
London Philosophy Study Guide offers many suggestions
on what to read, depending on the student's familiarity with the
subject:
Aesthetics
- Augros, Robert M., Stanciu, George N., The New Story of
Science: mind and the universe, Lake Bluff, Ill.: Regnery
Gateway, c1984. ISBN 0895268337 (has significant material on Art,
Science and their philosophies)
- Feagin and Maynard,
Aesthetics; Oxford readers1997.
- Thomas Wartenberg, The
Nature of Art. 2006.
- John Bender and Gene Blocker Contemporary Philosophy of
Art: Readings in Analytic Aesthetics 1993.
- Noel Carroll, Theories of Art
Today. 2000.
- Benedetto Croce, Aesthetic
as Science of Expression and General Linguistic, 1902
- E. S.
Dallas, The Gay Science - in 2
volumes, on the aesthetics of poetry, published in 1866.
- Alain de Botton, The
Architecture of Happiness. Pantheon, 2006.
- Christine
Buci-Glucksmann, Esthetique De L'ephemere, Galilee, ISBN
2718606223
- Terry Eagleton, The Ideology
of the Aesthetic. Blackwell, 1990. ISBN 0-631-16302-6
- Penny
Florence and Nicola Foster , Differential Aesthetics.
London: Ashgate, 2000. ISBN 0-7546-1493-X
- Hans Hofmann and Sara T Weeks;
Bartlett H Hayes; Addison Gallery of American Art; Search for the real, and other essays
(Cambridge, Mass., M.I.T. Press, 1967) OCLC
1125858
- Berys Gaut and Dominic McIver Lopes (eds.), "Routledge
Companion to Aesthetics". London: Routledge, 2005. ISBN
0415327989
- David Goldblatt and Lee Brown, ed. Aesthetics: A Reader in the
Philosophy of the Arts. 1997.
- Evelyn Hatcher (ed.), Art as
Culture: An Introduction to the Anthropology of Art. 1999
- Michael Ann Holly and Keith Moxey (eds.), Art History and Visual
Studies. Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-300-09789-1
- Alexander J. Kent, "Aesthetics: A Lost Cause in
Cartographic Theory?" The Cartographic Journal, 42(2) 182-8,
2005.
- Peter Kivy (ed.), The Blackwell
Guide to Aesthetics. 2004
- Carolyn Korsmeyer (ed.),
Aesthetics: The Big Questions. 1998
- Martinus Nijhoff, A History
of Six Ideas: an Essay in Aesthetics, The Hague, 1980.
- Mario Perniola, The Art and
Its Shadow, foreword by Hugh J.Silverman, translated by
Massimo Verdicchio, London-NewYork, Continuum, 2004.
- Griselda Pollock, "Does Art
Think?" In: Dana Arnold and Margaret Iverson (eds.) Art and
Thought. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 2003. 129-174. ISBN
0-631-22715-6.
- Griselda Pollock,
Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum: Time, Space and the
Archive. Routledge, 2007. ISBN 0415413745.
- George Santayana, The Sense
of Beauty. Being the Outlines of Aesthetic Theory.
(1896) New York, Modern Library, 1955.
- Elaine Scarry, On Beauty and
Being Just. Princeton, 2001. ISBN 9780691089591
- Friedrich Schiller, (1795),
On the Aesthetic Education of Man. Dover Publications,
2004.
- Alan Singer & Allen
Dunn (eds.), Literary Aesthetics: A Reader. Blackwell
Publishing Limited, 2000. ISBN 978-0631208693
- Władysław
Tatarkiewicz, History of Aesthetics, 3 vols. (1–2,
1970; 3, 1974), The Hague, Mouton.
- Leo Tolstoy, What Is Art?
- John M. Valentine, Beginning Aesthetics: An
Introduction To The Philosophy of Art. McGraw-Hill, 2006. ISBN
978-0073537542
- John Whitehead, Grasping for
the Wind. 2001.
- Richard Wollheim, Art and
its objects, 2nd edn, 1980, Cambridge University Press, ISBN
0521 29706 0
- Robert Pirsig,
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into
Values, 1974, paperpack, or hardback first edition ISBN
0-688-00230-7
External links