Abstract
Discussions about the aesthetic relation frame are often focused on subject-object relations, on objects of arts, their production and their perception.1 A Christian philosophical anthropology emphasizes human subject-subject relations and human acts, including more than the production of artefacts. According to the philosophy of the cosmonomic idea, any kind of human act has an aesthetic aspect. Yet, I shall restrict myself to types of characters that are aesthetically qualified. I shall discuss characters of acts, which objects are not typically aesthetic; characters of acts, which objects are aesthetically qualified; characters of acts performed in subject-subject relations, and characters of aesthetically qualified associations