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Definition: aesthetics or sometimes US esthetics from Collins English Dictionary

n (functioning as singular)

1 the branch of philosophy concerned with the study of such concepts as beauty, taste, etc

2 the study of the rules and principles of art

[C18: from Greek aisthētikos perceptible by the senses, from aisthesthai to perceive]


aesthetics

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(ĕsthĕt'ĭks), the branch of philosophy that is concerned with the nature of art and the criteria of artistic judgment. The classical conception of art as the imitation of nature was formulated by Plato and developed by Aristotle in his Poetics , while modern thinkers such as Immanuel Kant, F. W. Schelling, Benedetto Croce, and Ernst Cassirer have emphasized the creative and symbolic aspects of art. The major problem in aesthetics concerns the nature of the beautiful. Generally speaking there are two basic approaches to the problem of beauty—the objective, which asserts that beauty inheres in the object and that judgments concerning it may have objective validity, and the subjective, which tends to identify the beautiful with that which pleases the observer. Outstanding defenders of the objective position were Plato, Aristotle, and G. E. Lessing, and of the subjective position, Edmund Burke and David Hume. In his Critique of Judgment , Kant mediated between the two tendencies by showing…
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Full text Article Aesthetics

From The Harvard Dictionary of Music
First coined as a technical term in 1735 by Alexander Baumgarten, now denoting almost exclusively the constellation of philosophical problems raised in our thinking about the fine arts. Hence, music aesthetics is taken here to comprise those issues of a philosophical character surrounding the art of…
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Full text Article aesthetics

From Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology
A notion invented in the eighteenth century in the German-speaking world, the term aesthetics was bequeathed to the history of ideas with philosopher Alexander Gottleib Baumgarten's Aesthetica (1750-8). As developed by Baumgarten, aesthetics was the study of the beautiful. He conceived of this…
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Full text Article Aesthetics

From The Sage Dictionary of Cultural Studies
Aesthetics is a domain of philosophy concerned with questions of Art and beauty. Traditionally, aesthetic philosophy has sought to provide universal criteria for the definition of Art, as in the work of Kant, and as such tends towards essentialism. An aesthetic judgement seeks to distinguish between…
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Full text Article Aesthetics

From The Social Science Jargon-Buster
Core definition The quality and nature of sensory perceptions and emotive feelings related to art, nature, and various cultural products. Longer explanation I'll start here by asking you to think about the antonym of aesthetic, ‘anesthetic’. Now something with an anesthetic action dulls your senses, …
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From Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science
Aesthetics is that branch of philosophy devoted to conceptual and theoretical inquiry into art and aesthetic experience . We may usefully distinguish three conceptions of the domain of aesthetics, according to what is taken as the focus of attention: The practice of making and appreciating works of…
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Full text Article aesthetics

From Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology
We can identify two issues which are important with respect to anthropology’s approach to aesthetics in non-Western societies: first, are we obliged to consider the anthropology of art and the anthropology of aesthetics as inseparable? We are first confronted by the problem of those societies which…
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Full text Article aesthetics

From Collins Dictionary of Sociology
( PHILOSOPHY ) the study of art and artistic appreciation. Among the topics considered by aesthetics is the extent to which our experience and appreciation of art is similar to or different from our experience and understanding of nature. A further question is whether the inherent qualities of the…
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From Philip's Encyclopedia
(Gk. aisthesis , perception) Specialized branch of philosophy concerned with the arts. Plato 's classical formulation of art as a mirror of nature was developed by Aristotle in his Poetics . As a distinct discipline, aesthetics dates from Alexander Baumgarten's Reflections on Poetry (1735). Common…
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Full text Article Aesthetics

From The SAGE Encyclopedia of the Sociology of Religion
Aesthetics emerged in the 18th century out of the philosophy of art and is usually considered a reflection and appreciation of art techniques. In its foundational approach, aesthetics primarily deals with modes of sensory perception and forms of bodily cognition. The difference between sensory…
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Full text Article Aesthetics

From SAGE Key Concepts series: Key Concepts in Critical Management Studies
Definition: Aesthetics is the philosophical investigation of sensuality, traditionally concerned with questions of beauty, taste and the nature of art. While relatively straightforward to define, aesthetics remains a rich and multifaceted concept. Most commonly it refers to the search for criteria…
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