I had a beautiful day today.  It's a beautiful world.  You are a
beautiful person.  I love beautiful. ;-)

On Jul 7, 10:14 am, Molly Brogan <[email protected]> wrote:
> What is beauty?  Is being beautiful like tasting good to Bob
> (subjective) or being 150 lbs. (objective)? The saying “beauty is in
> the eye of the beholder” suggests subjective. But other sayings
> —“beauty is truth” or “beauty is eternal”—suggest there is some
> objective quality to beauty. Advocates of the subjective view
> emphasize how difficult it is to get people to agree on aesthetic
> judgments. Advocates of the objective view make arguments like: “The
> Grand Canyon would be beautiful regardless of whether anyone was there
> to see it, so beauty is in the object.”
>
> Aristotle believed that there was no absolute beauty, but that it was
> based on perception. As a general term, the Greeks perceived beauty as
> interchangeable with excellence, perfection, and satisfaction.
> Plotinus believed that beauty did not include symmetry.  However,
> "beauty is that which irradiates symmetry, rather than symmetry
> itself."
>
> Plato introduced to the ideal of "Platonic love:" Plato saw love as
> motivated by a longing for the highest form of beauty—The Beautiful
> Itself, and love as the motivational power through which the highest
> of achievements are possible.
>
> Kant argues that such aesthetic judgments are 'judgments of taste',
> and insists that universality and necessity are in fact a product of
> features of the human mind (Kant calls these features 'common sense'),
> and that there is no objective property of a thing that makes it
> beautiful.
>
> The Taoist sage also thinks it is human judgment that what happens is
> beautiful or ugly, right or wrong, fortunate or not. The sage knows
> all things are one (equal) and does not judge. Our lives are snarled
> and jumbled so long as we make conventional discriminations, but when
> we set them aside, we appear to others as extraordinary and enchanted.
>
> Benedetto Croce, originator of the modern “expressionist theory” of
> aesthetic, maintains that the difference between the beautiful and the
> ugly is that: “expression in the naturalistic sense simply lacks
> expression in the spiritual sense, that is to say, the very character
> of activity of the spirituality, and therefore the bipartition into
> the poles of beauty and of ugliness.”  He sees beauty as part of the
> process of aesthetic expression that has four stages: impressions,
> expression or spiritual aesthetic synthesis (intuition), pleasure of
> the beautiful, translation of the aesthetic fact into physical
> phenomena.  The expressive process is exhausted when these four phases
> have been passed through.
>
> What do YOU think?
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