gad-fly wrote: ↑March 27th, 2022, 4:06 pm
In Argumentative Philosophical Forums, "Philosophy of the Arts and Philosophy in the Arts" is the last among seven categories. It would be more direct to have it titled as "Philosophy of Art", like the category before it titled as "Philosophy of Science".
Very appropriately, Scott has raised the New Topic from the very beginning: "What is Art?" This fundamental question must be answered by anyone as necessary qualification before enter discussion on the Philosophy of Art, to show he understands what he is talking about, but not what has nothing to do with Art.
The topic "What is Art?" has 795 posts spreading over 53 pages. The last but one post is dated Nov 15 2020. Apparently the task of going through the cobweb is too daunting for any one to meet the challenge. The latest post dated Jan 29 2022 has hardly made a stir.
What a pity! It is high time to revive the titled topic. I would like to initiate it as "What is Art? 2.0. To answer the question:
Art, like Science, is a subject matter which does not require justification, ratification, rationalization, ramification, and so on. To put it simply: It Is.
Different from Science, Art is not endowed by Nature. It is entirely aligned and associated with human creation for mental satisfaction. In the process, Art may be a side product or side effect in physical creation, whether deliberate, ingenuous. or accidental. ART cannot be blamed for good or evil, right or wrong, help or hinder, and so on. Art is available for the enjoyment and torment of all without prejudice. Finally, we should be thankful for there being art. It colors up our life.
LONG LIVE ART.
I am amazed that a title 'What is art?' got so many replies because it is so vague. Perhaps, the more vague a question will get more replies rather than one which is specific. Part of the ambiguity is around the subjective vs nature of what is good or bad in art. Some may see certain classic works as being art, such as that of Michselangelo, or van Gogh and dismiss art like postmodern installations. This may be asking what is good art really.
In that way it is about aesthetics and some may see certain standards of beauty. It may involve specific views about techniques and skill. In some ways such an emphasis may be important in understanding quality but the danger is that it involves some elitism. Also, it involves the therapeutic aspect of art making, especially in the development of art therapy as a profession which uses art as a way with working with psychological issues in depth..
Even the term art is vague, because it is often used to speak of the visual arts but can be applied to the arts in general. If anything, art may get overlooked a lot in philosophy. That is because often the big debates seem to rest on science. However, art involves the understanding of images and symbolism. These overlap with religious perspectives but the emphasis on art is more about imagination rather than seeing symbolic truths so literally. Of course, science incorporates imagination and aspects of art, just as art may draw upon science in research and technique as forms of expression. Sorry, I have gone on so much, but that was how I responded to the question of what is art which may evoke feelings as opposed to just rationality.