Abstract
Art, Emotion, and Ethics is a brilliant book with many important, useful,
insightful, and even profound things to say about a range of topics including
the relation of the imagination to art, understanding, and ethics,
and the paradox of fiction, as well as sensitive and in-depth interpretations
of masterpieces by the likes of Rembrandt and Nabokov. It is very
convincing in its jousts with autonomists for people like me who favor
the view that sometimes ethical blemishes are aesthetic blemishes and
sometimes ethical merits count as aesthetic merits. But that is because
I am not an autonomist or even a moderate autonomist.