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Trivial and serious in aesthetic appreciation of nature Ronald W. Hepburn

Trivial and serious in aesthetic appreciation of nature Ronald W. Hepburn. Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature. Defending “Outstanding natural beauty” against depredation Value of nature vs. values of industry “aesthetic appreciation of nature”? “Beauty” narrow vs. wide sense.

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Trivial and serious in aesthetic appreciation of nature Ronald W. Hepburn

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  1. Trivial and serious in aesthetic appreciation of nature Ronald W. Hepburn

  2. Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature • Defending “Outstanding natural beauty” against depredation • Value of nature vs. values of industry • “aesthetic appreciation of nature”? • “Beauty” narrow vs. wide sense

  3. Duality in Aesthetic Appreciation of Nature • sensuous component: • Thought-component: -implicit comparison -analogies to bear on the concrete particulars -modification of awareness, in which feeling, thought, and perception all interact Ex). The fall of an autumn leaf sense of immediacy, in the purest case one is taken aback by nature. -the sky color-effect, or the rolling away of cloud or mist from a landscape

  4. Perception-and-reflection • Perception: attentive, inattentive, discriminating, or undiscriminating, lively or lazy • Reflective-component: feeble or stereotypical, original, individual, or exploratory • Trivial: to the extent that it distorts, ignores, suppresses truth about its objects, feels and thinks about them in ways that falsify how nature really is. • “Detached viewer” • Deepening of seriousness: “realization that I am myself one with, part of, the nature over against me” • Serious approach is a self-exploration

  5. Superficial and “Seriousness” • Superficial reading of nature: • Objects will tend to have an invariable univocal expressive quality • Bland unawareness of potential variability and endless modification of qualities • “Seriousness” or “depth” not simply correlated to intensity or fullness of thought-content • -may neutralize or trivialize when fail to fuse thought with perceptual content

  6. Another important duality • Considering and contemplating nature in its own terms -Respecting natures own forms, structures, and sequences • Problems with serious goal of considering and contemplating nature in its own terms: • “in-its-own-terms” might prompt us to supply a scientific thought component • U-valley example

  7. Problem with “respect” • Natures limited respect for its individuals • Vulnerability and brevity of individual life • Disturbing thought-content • Working with a scale • “Between the extremes, we might find an acceptable ideal for serious aesthetic perception in encouraging ourselves to enhance the thought-load almost to the point, but not beyond the point, at which begins to overwhelm the vivacity of particular perception”

  8. 2nd approach to the forms of nature: • The forms of nature are annexed in imagination, interiorized, the external made internal -range: universally intersubjective (shareable, though not universal), to individual and personal • Metaphor • “Invisible world” • “Messages” • Dreamlike element of nature *any discrediting in each case is the work of literalism. Naively serious, and thus trivial.

  9. “Is it possible, however, to be moved by skeptical thoughts which suggest that the whole of this area of experience is nothing other than trivial, that aesthetic experience of nature—being founded on a variety of illusions— can never really be serious?” • Aesthetic experiences of nature because they are dependent on anthropocentric factors such as scale, viewpoint, and perspective may be fleeting and unstable. • Mountain Viewpoint • -view from a cliff vs. view from aircraft

  10. Creative role in fashioning aesthetic object: “The appreciators of nature have to find their viewpoint, decide on the boundaries of attention, generate the thought content” • Assumptions about “authority” • Readiness to conform, factor of trivialization • Failure to realize how deeply dependent our aesthetic appreciation of nature is on scale and individual viewpoint is to trivialize

  11. Concluding thoughts • Objectivizing and antiobjectivizing movements of the mind -on the one hand he wants objective truth pursued by science (provided it does not carry us beyond what can be incorporated in perceptual experience) -on the other hand, it has no stronger or more serious claim to aesthetic attention than has the illusory. • What exactly is Hepburn's position in the end? “We are free to respect, or to ignore, the objectivizing option. To feel bound to always pursue it is not really to show commitment to so-called seriousness, but rather to show a profound misunderstanding of the aesthetic. Or would that be simply and shockingly, at the very end, to capitulate to the trivializers?”

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