No, I don't think that makes it circular. It's not like saying a dog is a dog. I've added the stipulation that it has to be intended. — Artemis
No it doesn't. Just needs to use shape and color in a manner to communicate some thought or feeling. Again, you can get more strict about good vs bad art. — Artemis
I guess there would be an assumption that it must be manifest in the world somehow at some point, no matter how briefly. — Artemis
In any society it is theKing who decides what is art. We get a bit off topic if we define who the king currently is. — Pop
jgill You are an artist. I bet by varying the formula you could learn to control the patterns / colours produced. — Pop
Intentions have content - so an intention to do what? If it is 'to make a work of art' then it is circular in the same way as 'a dog is something that thinks like a dog' would be. — Bartricks
suitably technically demanding' as a necessary condition, for some work is not technically demanding yet seems nevertheless to be art. — Bartricks
If that's correct, then we do not need a definition and can appeal directly to rational appearances instead — Bartricks
↪jgill
I do not follow your meaning. I think we do indeed know art when we see it. Or rather, we know it when archaeologists see it.
So, some seem to think you only know something when you can define it, as if somehow reality were made of definitions.
I think we already have - via our reason - the understanding that the definitions are seeking to capture — Bartricks
Intention to create something that is aesthetically engaging in some way. — Artemis
What if Rembrandt just imagines a work of art, but doesn't paint it on anything? Is the imaginary painting a work of art? Surely not. — Bartricks
What if my intention is purely to make money - I couldn't care less if the work is aesthetically engaging, I just know that people like my drawings and are willing to pay me large sums of money for them?
Take Gainsborough. That was the case with him. He hated painting portraits - he didn't like them and wanted to paint landscapes - but he knew others really liked his portraits and that he could bang them out quite easily, so that's why he did them. But a Gainsborough portrait is clearly a work of art. — Bartricks
[/You also don't seem to understand that the concept of art transcends our definitions.quote]@Bartricks
The way to prove your assumption is to find fault with the following definition:
'Art is an expression of human consciousness. An art work is information about an artists consciousness and subconsciousness'
Show me a work of art that dose not fit the description..
means.Art is an expression of human consciousness
An art work is information about an artists consciousness and subconsciousness'
But he did not intend to engage them aesthetically. Plus why are you so sure about that? — Bartricks
[/quotThat's not necessarily true - take my Gainsborough example. He didn't like painting portraits, and so there's a decent chance that most Gainsborough portraits were painted by a grump who resented every brushstroke. But you can't tell that from the portraits plus it is grossly implausible to think that whether or not they qualify as art turns on whether we can reliably infer anything about his mental states from them.e]@Bartricks
You are describing Gainsborough's consciousness.
Sorry I should post my understanding of consciousness .
It will take a while I type with two fingers.
So, the idea that it is essential to something qualifying as art that it report something about its creator's conscious states seems false. Some art may qualify in that way, but it doesn't seem to be either a necessary or sufficient condition. — Bartricks
How else to differentiate between art and a sunflower? — Artemis
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