Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
30 Σεπ 2015 · It aims to give due regard to the entirety of people’s multi-faceted aesthetic life, including various ingredients of everyday life: artifacts of daily use, chores around the house, interactions with other people, and quotidian activities such as eating, walking, and bathing.
- Kant's Aesthetics and Teleology
1. The Faculty of Judgment and the Unity of the Third...
- Japanese Aesthetics
1. Introduction. Two preliminary observations about the...
- Feminist Perspectives on Objectification
Objectification is a notion central to feminist theory. It...
- Environmental Aesthetics
More broadly, the concerns of environmental aesthetics mesh,...
- Chan Buddhism
The Chan School (Chan zong, 禪宗) is an indigenous form of...
- Aesthetic Judgment
Scruton, Roger, 1974, Art and Imagination: A Study in the...
- Baudrillard, Jean
Associated with postmodern and poststructuralist theory,...
- Existentialist Aesthetics
1. Metaphysical foundations of existentialist aesthetics....
- Kant's Aesthetics and Teleology
1. The Concept of Taste. The concept of the aesthetic descends from the concept of taste. Why the concept of taste commanded so much philosophical attention during the 18th century is a complicated matter, but this much is clear: the eighteenth-century theory of taste emerged, in part, as a corrective to the rise of rationalism, particularly as applied to beauty, and to the rise of egoism ...
It is a notorious characteristic of philosophy that any attempt to define it raises more questions than it answers: if this is true of philosophy more broadly, it is perhaps even more true of that branch known as aesthetics.
27 Ιαν 2005 · In this chapter I offer first an outline of the structure of philosophical aesthetics as a whole, and then a selective sketch of the development of Anglo-American aesthetics over the past fifty years, focusing on five central topics: the concept of the aesthetic, the definition of art, the ontology of art, representation in art, and expression ...
Among the key values in aesthetics is its engagement with the world of art (historically and today) within and across cultures. Insofar as aesthetics also involves the philosophy of beauty, it invites reflection on what aesthetic values are specific to a culture, and which values are cross-cultural.
Philosophical aesthetics is here considered to center on these latter-day developments. Thus, after a survey of ideas about beauty and related concepts, questions about the value of aesthetic experience and the variety of aesthetic attitudes will be addressed, before turning to matters which separate art from pure aesthetics, notably the ...
In its aesthetic response to the world, the mind (or soul) experiences itself as alive and alert to its surroundings. Aesthetics has been completely routed around the problem of the feeling of life. Beauty and sublimity are just our way of labeling this feeling.