>Marco:
>Another thing I've noticed is that my cat *prefers* to sleep on clean 
>dresses, and on my bed when it's well arranged. Otherwise, if the bed is 
>all messed up, she uses to sleep on an old chair. In the past, another cat 
>had different fondnesses. I'd not point to that exactly as an appreciation 
>of *the art of bed arranging*, just I think that many mammals sometimes 
>seem to demonstrate a primitive sense of beauty. As well as they 
>demonstrate a primitive capacity (from our viewpoint) of thought.
>
>What the sense of beauty *is*, it's a difficult question. Surely, beauty 
>has the capacity to generate emotions; so, maybe, when we follow beauty we 
>are also searching for emotions. By means of art, this search becomes 
>active and not passive: it's an attempt to investigate and dominate and 
>communicate certain aspects of reality (let's not forget that emotions are 
>perfectly real).

At what point does "beauty" and "quality" become different? To me it seems 
as though you are using the two terms interchangably here. When your cat 
prefers a made-up bed to a messed-up bed, it is making a quality-assertion 
for itself. I'm sure there are many cats out there that prefer messed-up to 
made-up, and is a result of their past static PoVs.

But then, isn't that what art is aspiring to, Quality?

Are beauty and quality different?

Brian
_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com



MOQ.ORG  - http://www.moq.org
Mail Archive - http://alt.venus.co.uk/hypermail/moq_discuss/
MD Queries - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To unsubscribe from moq_discuss follow the instructions at:
http://www.moq.org/md/subscribe.html

Reply via email to