HANDSON wrote:Thanks for your responses. I really appreciate your thoughtful comments. Please consider the following:
1. Kant uses the term inter-subjective validity to indicate a judgment of taste as being true for all, so maybe not exactly objective but the next closest thing. The question of whether or not we have aesthetic common ground still remains.
2. Everyone may like trees but the attraction is not necessarily an aesthetic one. Someone who lives in the desert may like trees because they represent a water source, for instance. The same could be said about one's evaluation of the female body; that is the judgment is other than an aesthetic one.
3.The notion of a primal instinct is an interesting one.
I wonder what those objects, shapes and works of art might look like.
Re Kant,'.. the modality of a judgement of taste holds that something beautiful is necessarily so; it is an object of necessary delight, but not because it is 'in possession of a definite objective principle' nor because it rests on an individual sense of necessity.'
What is "true for all" is likely to be fundamentally primal that is instinctual and free from discretion and conscious thinking. It is possible to explore and research to list down a list of common primal aesthetic elements. The point is these elements were programmed into humans over millions of years and thus would remain in service and not subject to change easily.
While they will not change within current time, however, whatever we are expose in the current phase of our evolution may be instinctual aesthetic elements in 2 million (if humans were to survive that long) years later.
If
all the ancestors of homo-sapiens had been struggling in a dessert condition from the start and over 6 million years of evolution, it is likely that green trees and water would be significant aesthetic elements for all humans at present. But that was not the case then, as such, responses to trees and water at present are relative.
A sense of spontaneous aesthetic (with 'disinterestedness) is evoked base on a combination of so-called aesthetic elements. If you are familiar with photography and arts, there the fundamental principles in combination that would invoke 'aesthetic' in any work of arts, i.e. rule of the third, perspective, level horizon, no bulls-eyes, correct combination of colors, shapes like spirals, symmetry, etc. without the need for any conscious deliberation. These aesthetic elements initially has survival values and had been embedded in humans at the deepest level a priori beyond conscious discretion.
Whatever facilitate survival is connected to pleasure centers. Since the aesthetic elements facilitate surival, they in combinations or individuall will invoke the pleasure centers subliminally with a secondary feeling of beautifulness.
Not-a-theist. Religion is a critical necessity for humanity now, but not the FUTURE.