Thursday, July 9, 2020

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 3

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 3

3 Goodness
Moving from truth to goodness, what is the relationship between art and goodness? Is there a moral value of art? Does the artist have a moral responsibility? Should an artist moralize? Should art be censored? These are important questions dealing with the relationship between art and morality. Kant states that 
“the beautiful is the symbol of the morally good, and only in this light . . . does it give us pleasure with an attendant claim to the agreement of everyone else, whereupon the mind becomes conscious of a certain ennoblement and elevation above mere sensibility to pleasure from impressions of sense, and also appraises the worth of others on the score of a like maxim of their judgment.” Kant is saying that beauty is connected to goodness and this goodness justifies universal acceptance. In addition, beauty should ennoble the person. Kant goes on to say that the “freedom of the imagination . . . is, in estimating the beautiful, represented as in accord with the understanding’s conformity to law (in moral judgments the freedom of the will is thought as the harmony of the latter with itself according to universal laws of reason).”

 Kant thinks that aesthetic judgments should be in conformity with the moral law. Art should not debase the person. It seems he would argue that art must agree with natural law and the law of reason.
The movement of art for art’s sake rose up during the nineteenth century. This view believed that if “art is to be valued for its own sake then it must be detached from all purposes, including those of the moral life. A work of art that moralizes, that strives to improve the audience, that descends from the pinnacle of pure beauty to take up some social or didactic cause, offends against the autonomy of the aesthetic experience, exchanging intrinsic for instrumental values and losing whatever claim it might have had to beauty.” This seems to be an extreme view. It completely divorces art from morality. On the other hand, Plato forbids the poets from entering his city in the Republic, but allows for the philosopher, who knows the truth, to be a poet. In addition, Plato uses poetic devices in the Republic: allegory, analogy, metaphor, simile, etc.. Then, there are religious people who actively censor different kinds of art. Is there no middle ground?
Scruton thinks that it is a “failing in a work of art that it should be more concerned to convey a message than to delight its audience.” There are works of art that use art as a propaganda tool. “The lessons urged upon us are neither compelled by the story nor illustrated in the exaggerated figures and characters; the propaganda message is not part of aesthetic meaning but extraneous to it.” An example of using art for political propaganda is Mikhail Sholokhov’s Quiet Flows the Don. There are works of art that integrate their moral message “in an aesthetically integrated frame.” John Bunyan’s Pilgrims’s Progress presents a work in which both the form and the content are aesthetically integrated. 
Hegel states that the idea is the content of art. The first attribute of art requires that the content, “which is to be offered to artistic representation, shall show itself to be worthy of representation.” Hegel is saying that not just any ideas should be represented in art. He thinks both the content and the form should be good. Second, the idea should not be represented in abstract form. The idea must be manifested concretely. Hegel states that the imagination is the “proper medium” and that the imagination “is essential to every product that belongs to the beautiful, whatever type it may be.” Hegel is saying that works of art are communicated through the imagination, not the reason. Art communicates truth differently than science. He is also stating that both the content and the form must be closely intertwined. In other words, the content cannot be extraneous to the form. Both content and form communicate truth through the imagination.

Scruton does think that art should have moral value. He thinks it is morally wrong when art presents vice in such a way that makes it attractive. There are different kinds of ways that evil can be presented in art. First, it can be presented in such a way that the reader must make a moral judgment about it. Second, it can be presented in such a way that the reader is shown how an action is evil. Finally, evil can be presented in such a way that attracts the reader to it. For example, it influences the reader to think of evil as good. Scruton thinks art can be moral, but should not be moralizing. Scruton writes, “Works of art are forbidden to moralize, only because moralizing destroys the true moral value, which lies in the ability to open our eyes to others, and to discipline our sympathies towards life as it is. Art is not morally neutral, but it has its own way of making and justifying moral claims.”

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 2

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 2

2 Truth
Scruton argues that after the Enlightenment, there was a movement to make art a rival to religion because art had a different type of status than science. Science was a threat to religion. Science was able to offer alternative explanations to the teachings of religion. For example, the theory of evolution was favored by the educated over the creation stories of Genesis. This so-called debunking of religion influenced some people to consider art as a different way than science to find truth. Scruton asserts, “But art seemed to represent a different way of looking at the world from science, one which preserved the mystery of things and didn’t undo the mystery. Since the mystery was so important, why not look to art as a source of meaning?” 
Kant thinks the judging of anything as beautiful is aesthetic, a judgment of taste. Kant writes: “The judgment of taste, therefore, is not a cognitive judgment, and so is not logical, but is aesthetic--whose determining ground cannot be other than subjective.” What does Kant mean when he says that the judgment of taste is not cognitive? What does he mean when he says that the judgment of taste is subjective? Is he saying that a judgment of taste is relative? Scruton states, “The status of beauty as an ultimate value is questionable, in the way that the status of truth and goodness are not.” He goes on to say, however, even truth and goodness is questioned as an absolute value today. 
Although Kant states that aesthetic judgment is “rooted in subjective experience,” does this mean there is no objectivity to aesthetic judgment? Kant does not seem to draw that conclusion. Kant states, “Taste is the faculty of estimating an object or a mode of representation by means of a delight or aversion apart from any interest. The object of such a delight is called Beautiful.” Kant, however, states that this judgment of taste “must be coupled with it a claim to subjective universality.” Kant is saying that a judgment of taste or aesthetic judgment is determined subjectively, but has universal validity. Kant seems to be saying that an aesthetic judgment is both subjective and objective. In addition, it has ultimate value. Kant is saying that an aesthetic judgment is a way to acquire knowledge in a non-cognitive way.

What can one learn from art? Does art communicate truth? Is the truth provided by art a truth that cannot be discovered any other way? There are different kinds of art: abstract and representational art. Representational art will include novels, plays, films, and poetry. These different types of art do not give us literal truth about the world, but another kind of truth. These truths are accessed through the imagination. Scruton writes, “Our favorite works of art seem to guide us to the truth of the human condition.” One might say, science speaks about the general, but the novelist speaks about the individual. Fiction is not offering information to be consumed, but worlds of the imagination to experience.

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 1

Truth, Goodness, and Beauty Part 1

The idea of beauty as an ultimate value goes back to Plato. Scruton writes: “According to this idea beauty is an ultimate value--something that we pursue for its own sake, and for the pursuit of which no further reason needs to be given. Beauty should therefore be compared to truth and goodness, one member of a trio of ultimate values which justify our rational inclination.” Truth is usually associated with reason or science; the good is usually associated with religion and ethics; and finally, beauty is usually associated with art. The question that must be asked is there a relationship between truth, goodness, and beauty? Is there a relationship between art and truth, goodness, and beauty?

First, art needs to be defined. What is art? The word art has many different meanings, but in the more recent times the definition has been focused on the fine arts. In the 19th century, art became identified with the new discipline of aesthetics. Scruton notes, “Only in the course of the nineteenth century, and in the wake of Hegel’s posthumously published lectures on aesthetics, did the topic of art come to replace that of natural beauty as the core subject matter of aesthetics.” The definition of art in the history of Western Civilization has had a broader meaning. In this tradition, there have been different kinds of arts. Both healing and teaching are recognized as arts. Another kind of art is the liberal arts, cultivating the skills of the mind. Other kinds of arts are arts and crafts, industrial arts, and the useful arts. In the history of Western Civilization, the useful arts have been more prominent than the fine arts until recent times. Although this paper is aware of the broader definition of the arts, it will concentrate on the fine arts, especially, literature, music, painting and sculpture. The question this paper asks is: What is the relationship between truth, goodness, beauty, and the fine arts?