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Single Idea 22347

[filed under theme 21. Aesthetics / C. Artistic Issues / 7. Art and Morality ]

Full Idea

The appreciation of beauty in art or nature is not only the easiest available spiritual exercise; it is also a completely adequate entry into (and not just analogy of) the good life, since it checks selfishness in the interest of seeing the real.

Gist of Idea

Appreciating beauty in art or nature opens up the good life, by restricting selfishness

Source

Iris Murdoch (The Sovereignty of Good [1970], II)

Book Ref

Murdoch,Iris: 'The Sovereignty of Good' [RKP 1974], p.64


A Reaction

Not keen on 'spiritual' exercises, but I very much like 'seeing the real' as a promotion of the good life. The hard bit is to know what reality you are seeing in a work of art. [p.84] Her example is the sudden sight of a hovering kestrel.

Related Idea

Idea 22349 Art trains us in the love of virtue [Murdoch]


The 22 ideas from Iris Murdoch

Man is a brave naked will, separate from a background of values and realities [Murdoch]
We know perfection when we see what is imperfect [Murdoch]
Literature is the most important aspect of culture, because it teaches understanding of living [Murdoch]
Philosophy moves continually between elaborate theories and the obvious facts [Murdoch]
An unexamined life can be virtuous [Murdoch]
Philosophy must keep returning to the beginning [Murdoch]
Love is a central concept in morals [Murdoch]
If I attend properly I will have no choices [Murdoch]
It is hard to learn goodness from others, because their virtues are part of their personal history [Murdoch]
Kantian existentialists care greatly for reasons for action, whereas Surrealists care nothing [Murdoch]
Moral philosophy needs a central concept with all the traditional attributes of God [Murdoch]
Ordinary human love is good evidence of transcendent goodness [Murdoch]
Moral reflection and experience gradually reveals unity in the moral world [Murdoch]
Appreciating beauty in art or nature opens up the good life, by restricting selfishness [Murdoch]
Only trivial virtues can be possessed on their own [Murdoch]
Art trains us in the love of virtue [Murdoch]
Only a philosopher might think choices create values [Murdoch]
We should first decide what are the great works of art, with aesthetic theory following from that [Murdoch]
Art and morals are essentially the same, and are both identical with love [Murdoch]
Love is realising something other than oneself is real [Murdoch]
Great art proves the absurdity of art for art's sake [Murdoch]
Because art is love, it improves us morally [Murdoch]