Taste and Experience in Eighteenth-Century British Aesthetics

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Taste and Experience in Eighteenth-Century British Aesthetics

The Move toward Empiricism

History of art Social and cultural history Philosophical traditions and schools of thought Philosophy: aesthetics

Author: Dabney Townsend

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Language: English

Published by: Bloomsbury Academic

Published on: 2nd June 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 256 pages

ISBN: 9781350298729


Taste and Experience in Eighteenth Century Aesthetics

acknowledges theories of taste, beauty, the fine arts, genius, expression, the sublime and the picturesque in their own right, distinct from later theories of an exclusively aesthetic kind of experience. By drawing on a wealth of thinkers, including several marginalised philosophers, Dabney Townsend presents a novel reading of the century to challenge our understanding of art and move towards a unique way of thinking about aesthetics.

Speaking of a proto-aesthetic, Townsend surveys theories of taste and beauty arising from the empiricist shift in philosophy. A proto-aesthetic was shaped by the philosophers who followed Locke and accepted that theories of taste and beauty must be products of experience alone. Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Alexander Gerard and Thomas Reid were among the most important advocates, joined by others who re-thought traditional topics.

Featuring chapters tracing its philosophical principles, issues raised by the subjectivity of the empiricist approach and the more academic proto-aesthetic formed toward the end of the century, Townsend argues that Lockean empiricism laid the foundations for what we now call aesthetics.

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