Revival of Beauty

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A01=Catherine Wesselinoff
Acquaintance Principle
Aesthetic Attitude Theories
Aesthetic Categories
aesthetic emotion
Aesthetic Emotions
Aesthetic Experience
Aesthetic Judgement
aesthetic theory
aesthetics
affective states research
Alexander Nehamas
anti-aesthetic movement analysis
Anti-Aesthetic Position
Anti-Aestheticism
Aquinas
Arthur Danto
Artistic Repertoire
Attitudinal Features
Author_Catherine Wesselinoff
Beautiful Objects
beauty
Beauty-Revivalism
begetting
Brillo Box
Category=ABA
Category=AGA
Category=QDTN
Catherine Wesselinoff
De Kooning
desire
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Erased De Kooning Drawing
experience
Follow
history of philosophy
Holds
kalliphobia
Neo-Aestheticism
philocaly
philosophy of art
philosophy of beauty
Platonic Account
pleasure
Reflective Judgement
reflective judgment
sensory perception studies
Sensual Beauty
sensuous
Sensuous Pleasure
Thin Beauty
Unlimited
Vice Versa
Weil's Theory
Weil’s Theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032480756
  • Weight: 80g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book provides original descriptive accounts of two schools of thought in the philosophy of beauty: the 20th-century “Anti-Aesthetic” movement and the 21st-century “Beauty Revival” movement. It also includes a positive defence of beauty as a lived experience extrapolated from Beauty-Revival position.

Beauty was traditionally understood in the broadest sense as a notion that engages our sense perception and embraces everything evoked by that perception, including mental products and affective states. This book constructs and places in parallel with one another the Anti-Aesthetic and Beauty-Revival movements. In the author’s view, Anti-Aestheticism is devoted to a decisive negation of beauty—denying its importance as a philosophical notion and its significance as a lived experience. It suggests that beauty is a merely sensual experience, which can be used, at best, as a distraction from justice and, at worst, as an instrument of evil. Alternatively, the Beauty-Revival movement advances arguments for beauty as an experience that extends primarily to sensual experience, but which also calls forth mental products and cognitive and affective states evoked by that experience. After reconstructing these two positions, the author elaborates on the notion of beauty as a lived experience through three key moments which occur in the process of our experiencing beautiful objects. These moments are (a) the conditions that constitute an experience of beauty, (b) the attitudinal features most likely to lead to the experience of beauty, and (c) the results of the experience of beauty.

The Revival of Beauty will be of interest to scholars and advanced students working in aesthetics, history of philosophy, and art history.

Catherine Wesselinoff is a lecturer at the University of Notre Dame, Australia, where she teaches courses in the history of philosophy, political philosophy, ethics, and aesthetics. She completed her PhD at the University of Sydney in 2022.

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