Hobbes, when you are big and you no longer have a need to make others small, then you maybe will perceive, either subjectively or objectively, the objective inherence in things.Hobbes' Choice wrote:He's apologising for your inadequacy.Walker wrote:Never apologize for your limitations, or for what you are.SpheresOfBalance wrote:Sorry walker, but I have to primarily agree with HC, as much as it pains me to do so.
What art is best, is dependent upon what someone likes the most. It's subjective!
But, an art piece is an object and the method in which it was created might be extremely difficult and time consuming, such that only someone that is familiar with the process can sense the beauty of it's objective reality, which surely can factor into their subjective opinion as to it's worth.
I know far better than you are capable of imagining.At the prices original name-art commands, there’s a whole lotta consensus in subjectivity. A consensus of subjectivity amount to objective truth? Of course not. The object d’art has objective qualities that are true to the principles of whatever the medium may be, as Hobbes knows..
The only way you can get to art having "objectively" agreed criteria, is EXACTY where you get consensus in subjectivity; as that is exactly the moment fools like your self convince themselves that there can be objective values that transcend human opinion.
It's called intersubjectivity and is often confused with objectivity.
What is an Artist?
Re: What is an Artist?
Re: What is an Artist?
Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.Terrapin Station wrote:Are you saying something different there than "x has properties F and G, because its material constituents have properties F and G"? If so, if you're saying something different than that there, just what are you saying?Walker wrote:The object d’art has objective qualities that are true to the principles of whatever the medium may be
Re: What is an Artist?
I'm edging toward that view as well. Not long ago I would have argued against it but now it seems the impersonal is becoming ever more dominant in a transition phase where art, music, etc are viewed more as artifact than art.Greta wrote:That sounds about right to me. I wonder if the music will be as diverse? The increased interconnectedness would seem to lead us to greater homogeneity. Certainly art in the commercial spheres has become less individualistic, quirky and experimental. Over time the bean counters worked out the formulae for maximal sales and gradually tweezed out the oddities and exceptions to create generic forms that seem to tick all the boxes revealed in sales analyses.Dubious wrote:I think the latter is in process of becoming more true not in the sense of disappearing but simply becoming inactive by archiving when no-longer serving an active interest. Our machine-like progeny - if we get that far - will have their own art which would probably appear alien and incomprehensible to us and perhaps not even accepted as art by us. If the human is in a state of transition equally so will be their sensibilities regarding the aesthetic in which there is no accounting for taste.Greta wrote:I sometimes wonder if our artistic regression is a temporary trend or if art and music will disappear as we become ever more machinelike.
Interestingly, this seems to echo humanity's future in nature, gradually homogenising and eliminating ever more of the environment until there remains only relatively sterile, synthetic products and the algorithms that brought them into being. Both the arts and humanity generally are generally becoming ever less physical (with physical needs ever more delegated to specialsed human or machine assistance), ever more a matter of management than execution. The arts and humanity generally are ever more layered with various formulae, with animal emotionalism looking ever more like icing on the cake rather than the cake itself.
I wonder what a being impervious to music - the most profound and abstract of all the arts - would be like...what would make it "feel" as if it actually possessed a soul. Or will only synthetics be used to temporarily create one. Perhaps the time is ripe to inquire now if everything on the planet, itself included, is doomed to become a commodity and would this morphed creature be ready to inflict the same fate on other planets if capable.
Re: What is an Artist?
The other possibility that animal emotionalism is the cake and increasingly what we have left is mostly icing.Dubious wrote:I'm edging toward that view as well. Not long ago I would have argued against it but now it seems the impersonal is becoming ever more dominant in a transition phase where art, music, etc are viewed more as artifact than art.Greta wrote:The arts and humanity generally are ever more layered with various formulae, with animal emotionalism looking ever more like icing on the cake rather than the cake itself.
That would be deaf people, whose souls are no doubt like anyone else's :) Seriously, an advanced AI may be able to comprehend both the musical form and how it affects organisms in real time, but it may be impervious to music's charms like the rare person you come across who doesn't care much for music.Dubious wrote:I wonder what a being impervious to music - the most profound and abstract of all the arts - would be like...what would make it "feel" as if it actually possessed a soul.
I'm thinking that, just as animals pass on an informational version of themselves when they reproduce, I think the Earth is creating informational versions of itself which may reproduce on other worlds once the growing Sun makes liquid water on the Earth's surface impossible.Dubious wrote:Or will only synthetics be used to temporarily create one. Perhaps the time is ripe to inquire now if everything on the planet, itself included, is doomed to become a commodity and would this morphed creature be ready to inflict the same fate on other planets if capable.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: What is an Artist?
Walker wrote:Hobbes, when you are big and you no longer have a need to make others small, then you maybe will perceive, either subjectively or objectively, the objective inherence in things.Hobbes' Choice wrote:He's apologising for your inadequacy.Walker wrote: Never apologize for your limitations, or for what you are.
I know far better than you are capable of imagining.At the prices original name-art commands, there’s a whole lotta consensus in subjectivity. A consensus of subjectivity amount to objective truth? Of course not. The object d’art has objective qualities that are true to the principles of whatever the medium may be, as Hobbes knows..
The only way you can get to art having "objectively" agreed criteria, is EXACTY where you get consensus in subjectivity; as that is exactly the moment fools like your self convince themselves that there can be objective values that transcend human opinion.
It's called intersubjectivity and is often confused with objectivity.
When you run out of argument you always attempt a personal remark.
Fact is you are on a hiding to nothing in this issue, because you are simply wrong.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: What is an Artist?
Walker wrote:Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.Terrapin Station wrote:Are you saying something different there than "x has properties F and G, because its material constituents have properties F and G"? If so, if you're saying something different than that there, just what are you saying?Walker wrote:The object d’art has objective qualities that are true to the principles of whatever the medium may be
intersubjectivity.
Re: What is an Artist?
Independent verification sans subjects' interaction = perception of relevant qualities defining discovered objective principlesHobbes' Choice wrote:Walker wrote:Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.Terrapin Station wrote:Are you saying something different there than "x has properties F and G, because its material constituents have properties F and G"? If so, if you're saying something different than that there, just what are you saying?
intersubjectivity.
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Re: What is an Artist?
What is 'independent'?Walker wrote:Independent verification sans subjects' interaction = perception of relevant qualities defining discovered objective principlesHobbes' Choice wrote:Walker wrote: Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.
intersubjectivity.
Re: What is an Artist?
Sans subjects' interaction.
Try to make a Big Boy without the required elements that define a Big Boy and you get a big fizzle, but if you succeed the product is universally and independently recognized by functioning in accordance with the inherent principles that define the Big Boy's existence.
Same goes for Art, or anything.
Try to make a Big Boy without the required elements that define a Big Boy and you get a big fizzle, but if you succeed the product is universally and independently recognized by functioning in accordance with the inherent principles that define the Big Boy's existence.
Same goes for Art, or anything.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: What is an Artist?
Name one objective quality of "art" and say how you "independently" found out about it.Walker wrote:Sans subjects' interaction.
Try to make a Big Boy without the required elements that define a Big Boy and you get a big fizzle, but if you succeed the product is universally and independently recognized by functioning in accordance with the inherent principles that define the Big Boy's existence.
Same goes for Art, or anything.
Re: What is an Artist?
Don’t be ridiculous. Finding the rhythm of a dance partner when their song is jingoistic bigotry certainly has a higher potential for missteps until the theme of that tune is isolated as a rhythm, but don’t mistake that for meat.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Walker wrote:Hobbes, when you are big and you no longer have a need to make others small, then you maybe will perceive, either subjectively or objectively, the objective inherence in things.Hobbes' Choice wrote: He's apologising for your inadequacy.
I know far better than you are capable of imagining.
The only way you can get to art having "objectively" agreed criteria, is EXACTY where you get consensus in subjectivity; as that is exactly the moment fools like your self convince themselves that there can be objective values that transcend human opinion.
It's called intersubjectivity and is often confused with objectivity.
When you run out of argument you always attempt a personal remark.
Fact is you are on a hiding to nothing in this issue, because you are simply wrong.
Re: What is an Artist?
I'll stick with Big Boy, since it's a much clearer example.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Name one objective quality of "art" and say how you "independently" found out about it.Walker wrote:Sans subjects' interaction.
Try to make a Big Boy without the required elements that define a Big Boy and you get a big fizzle, but if you succeed the product is universally and independently recognized by functioning in accordance with the inherent principles that define the Big Boy's existence.
Same goes for Art, or anything.
Folks independently find out when it blows up.
Same principle applies to Art, when the non-communicating hearts of non-intersubjective audience members are touched.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: What is an Artist?
Name one objective quality of "art" and say how you "independently" found out about it! Moron.Walker wrote:I'll stick with Big Boy, since it's a much clearer example.Hobbes' Choice wrote:Name one objective quality of "art" and say how you "independently" found out about it.Walker wrote:Sans subjects' interaction.
Try to make a Big Boy without the required elements that define a Big Boy and you get a big fizzle, but if you succeed the product is universally and independently recognized by functioning in accordance with the inherent principles that define the Big Boy's existence.
Same goes for Art, or anything.
Folks independently find out when it blows up.
Same principle applies to Art, when the non-communicating hearts of non-intersubjective audience members are touched.
- Terrapin Station
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Re: What is an Artist?
That quality is a subjective judgment--it's what she prefers. That others might prefer the same thing in no way suggests that that assessment isn't a mental assessment. Every person in the entire world might have exactly the same opinion--"that's the best purse." That doesn't imply that it's not an opinion. It doesn't imply that somehow it's an extramental fact found in the purse itself or wherever else you might want to posit its occurrence.Walker wrote:Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.Terrapin Station wrote:Are you saying something different there than "x has properties F and G, because its material constituents have properties F and G"? If so, if you're saying something different than that there, just what are you saying?Walker wrote:The object d’art has objective qualities that are true to the principles of whatever the medium may be
- Terrapin Station
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Re: What is an Artist?
It just means that those particular other folks (and again, it could be everyone, although that's pretty much never the case for anything if we're talking about more than a handful of people) have the same preferences. It doesn't imply that they're perceiving something external to themselves rather than expressing how they feel about something.Walker wrote:Independent verification sans subjects' interaction = perception of relevant qualities defining discovered objective principlesHobbes' Choice wrote:Walker wrote: Go shopping with a shrewd woman. She can sniff out the quality inherent in most any item, which others will independently verify.
intersubjectivity.