In a message dated 5/30/09 8:24:05 PM, [email protected] writes:

> Is what Daniel Bell said true?
> 

Artsy6 asks: Is what Daniel Bell said true? 

"...In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries[,]...for...the   
artists and the educated social classes...the exploration of all impulses   
became 
an aesthetic norm."

Too many undefined terms there: e.g. exploration, impulses, aesthetic, 
norms, class, all.

In 1859 John Brown explored his impulse to use armed insurrection to end 
slavery. But surely that wasn't the norm, nor do I personally see any reason 
to call it 'aesthetic'. 

"Ah, but John Brown is not a class!" But no alleged class is anything other 
than a collection of individuals. Besides, he didn't go alone to Harper's 
Ferry. The 'class of all those who went to Harper's Ferry with Brown' had 21 
members."

Though the Bell quote is too vague to be worth grappling with, I have an 
intuition that it'd be a formidable job for him successfully to contrast this 
era-characteristic with that of many other centuries. 



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