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varjag
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Stumbled tonight on this essay by Paul Graham. I'm sure the ideas explored there will relate to many people here. Clear analysis written in good language, well worth reading.
Finder said:Hmm, taste is not subjective, yet I found this essay boring and not very well thought out, which does not seem to be the concensus here. Is that irony?
Marc, you'll be surprised how many people will disagree with that. Especially with folks buying into postmodernism.Marc-A. said:That taste is not subjective, nihil novi sub sole, nothing new here.
mhv said:Taste and subjectivity?
I suppose it's easier to read than Kant's Critique of Judgement, even if the latter is sometimes wrong on certain points. Or Hume's "Standard of Taste." Or perhaps the entire damn 2,000 years of discussion in aesthetics about taste since the Greeks.
But that's okay, because everyone can understand art, so everyone can write about it...
mhv said:Taste and subjectivity?
I suppose it's easier to read than Kant's Critique of Judgement, even if the latter is sometimes wrong on certain points. Or Hume's "Standard of Taste." Or perhaps the entire damn 2,000 years of discussion in aesthetics about taste since the Greeks.
But that's okay, because everyone can understand art, so everyone can write about it...
Marc-A. said:Kinda agree with you.
That taste is not subjective, nihil novi sub sole, nothing new here. What taste is, how art work can be appreciated "universally", if it is possible, how different people (and not necessarily from different cultures) can talk about the same piece of art and understand each other ... that is the tricky thing.
Sparrow said:Would that be High, Mass, Popular or Avant-Garde, they’d be writing about?
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mhv said:Hehe, it's difficult to figure out. Past High Art (let's say Monet) has now faded into Popular Art (Monet posters), and the latter has probably faded into Post-Modern Art (sampling, appropriation), which is itself a kind of Mass Avant Garde (subvert all categories!).
By that reasoning, given that Kant, Hume, and all the other fun guys were analyzing High Art (can you make those capitals bigger?), their genotypes are pretty much everywhere down the tree of art and scholarship.
Finder said:Taste is subjective, but biological, cultural, and personal aspects are all weighing in.
Sparrow said:That’s the thing; the viewer or commentator not only brings his aesthetic judgment to a work but also his intellectual, his taste is clouded by his knowledge. I have to conclude that appreciation of art is just too complex to theorise about as each viewer brings to the work his on subjective reality “art for arts sake” is still the best explanation I have.
mhv said:I think the mechanisms of taste (i.e. the inferences, the reasonings, the emotions, the social factors, etc) are rather more understandable than the actual content of a judgement of taste (i.e. one's evaluation of a work).
For example, if you make some sociological analysis, you'll see trends correlating liking Mozart with, say, income or education. But it does not explain whether these works are good in any sense.
So it's possible to make an explanation from the person to the work, but it's much more difficult (intractable? I dunno) to make a similar explanation from the work itself to the appreciation.