Cognitive penetrability,context, and aesthetics: Nanay and Danto on the Gallery of Indiscernibles |
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Authors: | Bradley Richards |
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Affiliation: | Department of Philosophy, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada |
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Abstract: | Nanay has recently argued, on the basis of the cognitive penetrability of experience, that the attribution of aesthetically relevant properties (ARPs) supervenes on perceptual experience. I argue that this claim is false as stated and cannot be salvaged. I provide a series of thought experiments as counterexamples, showing that the title of an artwork can influence its ARPs, its meaning or value, and the accurate attributions of ARPs while the character of the perceptual experience of the piece remains constant. I introduce the notions of context and appropriate context, and I argue that ARPs supervene on observable properties and appropriate contexts; there is no difference in ARPs without a difference in appropriate context or a difference in observable properties. Two paintings may share all of their observable properties and all of their context-relative perceptual properties but be ARP distinct, since each has a different appropriate context, and contexts are not usually determined or instantiated by perceptual properties. |
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Keywords: | Aesthetics attention cognitive penetrability perceptual experience phenomenal character |
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