Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art: An IntroductionBloomsbury Academic, 2010/02/16 - 328 ページ Praised in its original edition for its up-to-date, rigorous presentation of current debates and for the clarity of its presentation, Robert Stecker's new edition of Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Art preserves the major themes and conclusions of the original, while expanding its content, providing new features, and enhancing accessibility. Stecker introduces students to the history and evolution of aesthetics, and also makes an important distinction between aesthetics and philosophy of art. While aesthetics is the study of value, philosophy of art deals with a much wider array of questions including issues in metaphysics, epistemology, the philosophy of mind, as well value theory. Described as a 'remarkably unified introduction to many contemporary debates in aesthetics and the philosophy of art,' Stecker specializes in sympathetically laying bear the play of argument that emerges as competing views on a topic engage each other. This book does not simply present a controversy in its current state of play, but instead demonstrates a philosophical mind at work helping to advance the issue toward a solution. |
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多く使われている語句
aesthetic appreciation aesthetic experience aesthetic judgments aesthetic properties aesthetic value appearance architecture argued argument art form art world artifacts artistic value artworks attitude audience beauty believe chapter character claim cognitive value color concept of art conception of aesthetic consider constructivist context created criticism define art definition of art deny depiction environment essential essentialist evaluation example existence expressivism expressivist fact feel fiction function functionalist Hence historical idea ideal observers identify Iliad imagine intention intentional object interpretation intrinsic issue Jerrold Levinson Kant Kantian kind Levinson look make-believe Malcolm Budd meaning moral flaw musical expressiveness novel ontology painting perceptual philosophy of art physical objects pity plausible pleasure poem problem proposal question reason refer relevant representation response response-dependent sake seeing-in sense simply someone Stephen Davies structure subjectivism theory thetic things tion true understanding University Press utterance visual Wollheim work's
