more from this thinker | more from this text
Full Idea
Times in which letters and arts are known to have flourished have been admired too much.
Gist of Idea
The flourishing of arts and letters is too much admired
Source
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (The Social Contract (tr Cress) [1762], III.09 n9)
Book Ref
Rousseau,Jean-Jacques: 'The Basic Political Writings', ed/tr. Cress,Donald A. [Hackett 1987], p.191
A Reaction
I assume most marxists would agree with this thought. Eighteenth century France is a good candidate for this judgement. The arts always needed patronage.
19780 | We seem to have made individual progress since savagery, but actually the species has decayed [Rousseau] |
19839 | The flourishing of arts and letters is too much admired [Rousseau] |
14852 | Culture cannot do without passions and vices [Nietzsche] |
4495 | The high points of culture and civilization do not coincide [Nietzsche] |
20108 | Every culture loses its identity and power if it lacks a major myth [Nietzsche] |
20948 | Human cultures are organisms which grow, and then fade and die [Spengler, by Bowie] |
23846 | Culture is an instrument for creating an ongoing succession of teachers [Weil] |
23414 | Liberals say state intervention in culture restricts people's autonomy [Kymlicka] |
9600 | If languages are intertranslatable, and cognition is innate, then cultures are all similar [Williamson] |
15662 | The 'culture industry' is an advertisement for the way things are [Finlayson] |
20679 | We stabilise societies with dogmas, either of dubious science, or of non-scientific values [Harari] |
21432 | Culture is the struggle to agree what is normal [Gibson,A] |