ELIT Seminar: “Bilkent Philosophy and Literature Colloquia Series”, C. Thi Nguyen / Patrick Fessenbecker, 7:30PM October 28 (EN)

Please find below the details for this academic year’s second seminar of the Bilkent Philosophy and Literature Colloquia Series, organised by Dr Patrick Fessenbecker and Dr Andrea Selleri and featuring Dr C. Thi Nguyen from the University of Utah. Anyone interested is very welcome to attend. The event will take place on Zoom.

TOPIC: ELIT / TALK Philosophy and Literature talk – C. Thi Nguyen / Patrick Fessenbecker (host)

Time: Friday 28 October 2022, 19:30 – 20:45.
***This is an online seminar. To request the event link, please send a message to department.

ABSTRACT: Aesthetic judgment is different from scientific judgment. For many, a key difference is that aesthetic judgment does not proceed via inferences. We cannot infer the existence of an aesthetic property based on the application of a rule. We must see for ourselves if some arrangement of lines and colors is, in fact, graceful. But we also give, exchange, and demand of each other reasons for our judgments about aesthetic properties. What kind of property could be non-inferential, but, at the same time, subject to reasons? I would like to present a new solution: that non-inferentialism about aesthetic properties is not a some mysterious metaphysical feature of aesthetic properties, but is rather a norm of a social practice. When we accept this rule, the activity of aesthetic appreciation goes better in a few ways. First, it drives the appreciator’s attention towards looking at particular details in a work, rather than looking for recurring statistical regularities or abstract principles. This prevents a purely scientific approach to aesthetic judgment, and drives the appreciator towards a detail-oriented perception of a work’s particularities. It drives conversants to continue to sensuously attend to works, rather than shifting to more abstract methods of inquiry such as the philosophical search for first principles, or the scientific study of aggregate regularities in perception. Second, it sculpts a particular kind of interaction: open-ended exchanges of reasons which motivate the conversants to return to attending to the work. The value of the activity of aesthetic appreciation turns out to be quite distinct from that of, say, science. The goal is not the accumulation of true knowledge, but fostering engagement in a particular valuable human activity. Perhaps we don’t disagree about art to get to the truth, but we construct our artworks and art practices to foster endless, satisfying disagreement.
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: C. Thi Nguyen is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Utah. He writes about trust, art, games, and communities. He is interested in the ways that our social structures and technologies shape how we think and what we value. His first book, Games: Agency as Art, was awarded the American Philosophical Associations 2021 Book Prize.