Abstract
Aestheticians have had a great deal to say recently in praise of (aesthetic)
appreciation. This enthusiastic appreciation for appreciation may seem
unsurprising given the important role it plays in many of our aesthetic
practices, but we maintain that some prominent aestheticians have overstated
the role of appreciation (and, perhaps more importantly, understated
the role of other elements we will discuss) when it comes to the exercise of
aesthetic taste. This is not, of course, to deny the obvious fact that appreciation
often plays an important role in our aesthetic practices but merely
that it is a mistake to cast it in the role of the sine qua non of aesthetics.