Abstract
Aesthetics presents a confusing domain for a philosopher. Its territory
seems like an Empedoclean cosmos: a ceaselessly dynamic interchange
of mixtures, at times resisting division, at times fracturing into an
incomprehensible manifold. There may be no truth in aesthetics at all.
Perhaps there is not even much truth about it. Some think of aesthetics
primarily as a cultural or political phenomenon, others manage to
reduce it to history (indeed, to a history that is over, and therefore safe).
Still others investigate it from the points of view of psychology,
physiology, religion, technology, or morality. These are just a few of the
innumerable “discourses” of aesthetics. Within a narrow focus some of
these discourses appear to be meaningful, but this appearance owes
much to the artificial and conditioned structure of the conversation.
When viewed from the outside, the discourses of aesthetics often
appear to be little more than babble. The hypothesis that they might
someday converge on a perfectly general aesthetics seems implausible,
even for arts and art histories of a more or less continuous, singular
culture.