Michael R. Spicher

Boston Architectural College
Massachusetts College of Art and Design
  •  6
    ‘Human being and human becoming should be directed towards betterment’ (p. 1). With this opening statement, Tim Waterman motivates his recent book, The Landscap.
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    Aesthetic Taste Now: A Look Beyond Art and the History of Philosophy
    Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics 3 (43): 159-167. 2020.
    Aesthetic taste rose to prominence in the eighteenth century, and then quickly disappeared. Since the start of the 2000s, scholars have slowly returned to the main traditional concepts in aesthetics—beauty, the sublime, and aesthetic experience. Aesthetic taste, however, has lagged behind. I focus on two explanations for this downturn: aesthetics is too often associated with art alone and taste is thought to have no connection with anything objective. In this paper, I suggest that theories of ae…Read more
  •  7
    Hope Coming On: Reflecting Nihilism
    Journal of Comparative Literature and Aesthetics 42 (2). 2019.
    In this paper, I will use the performance of Hope Coming On as a catalyst to talk about the relationship between hope and nihilism. These seemingly opposed concepts rely on one another, in a sense, for their meaning. If everything was perfectly wonderful with the world, we could not be tempted with nihilism. But we would also not need hope, which is the desire for something better.
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    Aesthetic Taste
    Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2017.
    Aesthetic Taste Taste is the most common trope when talking about the intellectual judgment of an object’s aesthetic merit. This popularity rose to an unprecedented degree in the eighteenth century, which is the main focus of this article. Taste became a major concept in aesthetics. This prominence was so pronounced that it might seem that … Continue reading Aesthetic Taste →
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    The Sublime in Modern Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature. By Emily Brady (review)
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (3): 598-600. 2014.
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    The Distinct Basic Good of Aesthetic Experience and Its Political Import
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 87 (4): 711-729. 2013.
    To protect art under the First Amendment, John Finnis claims that art is simply the expression of emotion. Later, to protect aesthetic experience from subjectivity, Finnis claims that aesthetic experience is just a form of knowledge. However, neither of these claims adequately accounts for the nature of their objects nor fully protects them. The expression of emotion—intrinsic to art in Finnis’s view—is not always clear or even present, yet people can still appreciate the work. Equally problemat…Read more
  •  4
    Medieval Theories of Aesthetics
    Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
    The term ‘aesthetics’ did not become prominent until the eighteenth century in Germany; however, this fact does not prevent principles of aesthetics from being present in the Middles Ages. Developments in the Middles Ages paved the way for the future development of aesthetics as a separate discipline. Building on notions from antiquity (most notably Plato and Aristotle) through Plotinus, the medieval thinkers extended previous concepts in new ways, making original contributions to the developmen…Read more