There is a very large but probably finite number of possible images that the human eye can distinguish. Among these possible images, it seems that a relatively small subset is very beautiful (or has some other aesthetic quality to a high degree—I'll just stick to beauty for now). One way to see that visual artist is as a discoverer and communicator of beautiful images: in that very large finite space of possible images, she discovers a beautiful one, and then realizes it. The realization makes it possible for her to communicate her discovery to others. (Of course, the tools of discovery will often not be entirely mental—paintbrushes, texture of canvas, and the like all are tools of discovery, like a scientist's instruments or a mathematician's calculator or scrap paper.) Likewise, the musician searches the very large but probably finite number of possible sequences of sounds that the human ear can distinguish for that small minority that are very beautiful, and realizing the possible sequence communicates her discovery to others.
This model of the artist as discoverer and communicator makes the artist not that different from the pure mathematician, who also searches a large space of abstracta—say, the space of proofs or the space of theorems—for the few that exhibit some property, often an aesthetic one such as beauty (mathematicians also talk of "interest", but when the mathematics is pure, that "interest" is a kind of aesthetic quality, and for simplicity I'll stick to beauty) and then communicates these to others.
How exactly the analogy between the artist and the mathematician works out depends on whether Platonism about propositions (and similar objects) is true. The musician and painter in producing sounds and paintings do not merely represent the beauty of the possible sound or image: they make the possible sound or image actual. If such Platonism is true, then the mathematician does not realize possibilia in presenting a proof or a theorem, but only represents them. In this way, the mathematician is more like a composer or a novelist whose product is also a representation of a thing of beauty, rather than the thing of beauty itself. (Of course, the inscription of a theorem or a musical composition can be beautiful—the the quality of the calligraphy, say, but this is not mathematical or musical artistry per se.) On the other hand, if Platonism is false, then we might think of the very token inscriptions of a theorem or a proof as realizations of the possibilia that the mathematician has discovered: the mathematician searches the space of possible theorem inscriptions and finds beautiful ones.
Of course the discovery model of the artist's work isn't the only model of the artist's work. I think a creation model is more common. This model lays an emphasis on producing a thing of beauty (or other aesthetic qualities, of course). But I think that the discovery model works particularly well for a composer, who can be a great composer upon composing a beautiful work even if no one performs it.
The creation model makes the artist more like God. Is that a merit or demerit of the model?
But remember I am no philosopher of art.
If badness is a privation, does the space of possible images contain ugly images? And if it doesn't, what is the artist "discovering"?
ReplyDeleteI am actually inclined to think there is beauty everywhere, but it differs in degrees. Much of the space may be ho-hum.
ReplyDeleteEverywhere? Including in the most horrible evils?
ReplyDeleteIn any case, your reference to the "ho-hum" suggests the following question: does God find anything ho-hum? It seems boredom isn't a perfection, and so can't be attributed to God. But if God doesn't find anything ho-hum or boring, then it seems to follow that nothing is ho-hum.
Relatively ho-hum. :-)
ReplyDeleteAs for the greatest evils, evil is but a privation, so where the evil is, there is a good, too, against the background of which the evil is an evil. Where there is pain or vice, there is a mind in pain or a vicious will--and a mind or will is a beautiful thing.
Do you think that any genuine entities are bad or at least somewhat bad? If so, does that entail that God has made some bad or somewhat bad things?
ReplyDeleteMaybe the view would be that God makes some things which (as it happens) are bad, but that God does not make them bad (i.e., cause them to be bad)? If so, there might be a concern that this does not work for the case of things (such as an AIDS virus or a tick) which are essentially bad/somewhat-bad.
I find myself pushed toward a pluriverse view to avoid the conclusion that God has caused some entities to be at least somewhat bad. But I'm interested to know what other views a theist might take on this.
Well, there certainly are entities that exhibit badness. I am one of them. :-(
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't say that a virus is evil in and of itself. It just causes harm to other things. But that's a matter of the arrangement of the rest of the universe, not of its intrinsic features. We could have a world where HIV viruses do nothing but provide great joy to scientists who admire their beauty as they reproduce in an appropriate culture medium. But alas our world isn't like that: in our world, the viruses cause great misery. But misery isn't their essential aim. Their essential aim, if they have one (are viruses alive? if not, I am not sure they exist--maybe there are just field or particles arranged viruswise), is survival and reproduction.