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On the Aesthetic IdealBritish Journal of Aesthetics 55 (4): 433-447. 2015.How should we pursue aesthetic value, or incorporate it into our lives, if we want to? Is there an ideal of aesthetic life? Philosophers have proposed numerous answers to the analogous question in moral philosophy, but the aesthetic question has received relatively little attention. There is, in essence, a single view, which is that one should develop a sensibility that would give one sweeping access to aesthetic value. I challenge this view on two grounds. First, it threatens to undermine our "…Read more
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Can’t Kill the Vibe: Against Hope in Aesthetic DiscourseMind. forthcoming.In a recent paper, Nat Hansen and Zed Adams argue for an aesthetic discourse governing principle they call Hope. Inspired by the work of Stanley Cavell, they argue that when we speak with each other about the aesthetic value of an object we hope that our attitudes about the object will converge. They characterize this shared hope as involving the exercise of rational capacities in the service of sharing feelings and attitudes, and as accommodating enough to sanction even acrimonious aesthetic ex…Read more
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Connecting Beauty and LoveIn Alex King (ed.), Art and Philosophy: Essays at the Intersection, Oup. 2025.In aesthetics there is a long tradition according to which beauty is the object of love. One construal of this suggests a sentimentalist theory of beauty: beauty just is the object of an emotion aptly described as love. The first step toward such a view would be to discern whether we can make sense of at least some kind of aesthetic affect as at least some kind of love. I suggest that we can by taking up a thought from Frank Sibley, according to whom aesthetic properties reflect non-aesthetic va…Read more
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Toward a Communitarian Theory of Aesthetic ValueJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 80 (1): 16-30. 2022.Our paradigms of aesthetic value condition the philosophical questions we pose and hope to answer about it. Theories of aesthetic value are typically individualistic, in the sense that the paradigms they are designed to capture, and the questions to which they are offered as answers, center the individual’s engagement with aesthetic value. Here I offer some considerations that suggest that such individualism is a mistake and sketch a communitarian way of posing and answering questions about the …Read more
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Autonomy and aesthetic valuingPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research (I): 391-409. 2024.Accounts of aesthetic valuing emphasize two constraints on the formation of aesthetic belief. We must form our own aesthetic beliefs by engaging with aesthetic value first-hand (the acquaintance principle) and by using our own capacities (the autonomy principle). But why? C. Thi Nguyen’s proposal is that aesthetic valuing has an inverted structure. We often care about inquiry and engagement for the sake of having true beliefs, but in aesthetic engagement this is flipped: we care about arriving a…Read more
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Comments on Thi Nguyen’s Games: The Art of Agency, delivered at the 2021 American Society for Aesthetics Annual Meeting in Montreal. -
Schiller on Freedom and Aesthetic Value: Part IBritish Journal of Aesthetics 60 (4): 375-402. 2020.In his Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man, Friedrich Schiller draws a striking connection between aesthetic value and individual and political freedom, claiming that, ‘it is only through beauty that man makes his way to freedom’. However, contemporary ways of thinking about freedom and aesthetic value make it difficult to see what the connection could be. Through a careful reconstruction of the Letters, we argue that Schiller’s theory of aesthetic value serves as the key to understanding …Read more
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Street Art: The Transfiguration of the CommonplacesJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 68 (3): 243-257. 2010.According to Arthur Danto, post-modern or post-historical art began when artists like Andy Warhol collapsed the Modern distinction between art and everyday life by bringing “the everyday” into the artworld. I begin by pointing out that there is another way to collapse this distinction: bring art out of the artworld and into everyday life. An especially effective way of doing this is to make street art, which, I argue, is art whose meaning depends on its use of the street. I defend this definitio…Read more
San Diego, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Aesthetics |
| Value Theory |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Social Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Action |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |