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Full Idea
We routinely do not respond to art as if we were as if we were real-life spectators of its events.
Gist of Idea
We don't often respond to events in art as if they were real events
Source
Daniel Jacobson (Ethical Criticism and the Vice of Moderation [2006], 'rejection')
Book Ref
'Aesthetics and the Phil of Art (debates)', ed/tr. Kieran,Matthew [Blackwell 2004], p.354
A Reaction
This strikes me as one of the basic facts about aesthetics, and especially of narrative art. People sometimes encounter terrible events on the street, only to find someone is making a film.
22696 | 'Autonomism' says the morality is irrelevant to the aesthetics [Jacobson,D] |
22697 | Moral defects of art can be among its aesthetic virtues [Jacobson,D] |
22700 | Immoral art encourages immoral emotions [Jacobson,D] |
22701 | Jokes can sometimes be funny because they are offensive [Jacobson,D] |
22702 | Audiences can be too moral [Jacobson,D] |
22699 | Moderate moralism says moral qualities can sometimes also be aesthetic qualities [Jacobson,D] |
22703 | We don't often respond to events in art as if they were real events [Jacobson,D] |
22698 | We can judge art ethically, or rate its ethical influence, or assess its quality via its ethics [Jacobson,D] |