Sunday, 14 April 2013

The Aesthetics Paradox: Thank Goodness We Can’t Solve It.

Wendy Haines

If there’s one thing Immanuel Kant left us with, it’s a puzzle. Not because he failed to answer his own questions, but because he told us they were unanswerable in nature. Judgements of taste seem to be objective, but they clearly aren’t; Judgements of taste seems to be subjective, but they clearly aren’t. That’s the gist of it, the summary, the most basic representation of one of the most infamously baffling philosophical texts in history: Critique of Judgement.
Kant may be only one of hundreds to tackle the question of taste, but in my opinion he answers it best by saying there is no answer, in a way. He at least implies that both supposed ‘answers’ are correct in their own ways, using a concept of collective subjectivity to effectively blend them. Subjectivity is definitively not collective, yet there must be a reason why he does not equate this idea with objectivity.
Regardless, my argument here is that promoting a co-existence of objectivity and subjectivity can put a critic’s mind at rest. Asserting that our judgement of art is either entirely objective or subjective may be appealing, particularly in the latter case, but either way it doesn’t really help us. Total subjectivity is a comforting security blanket – the idea that your opinion cannot be judged because it is just your opinion. It cannot be validated or vice versa. If this is true, then I can’t help but question the point in any sort of criticism. If everything is a matter of opinion, then is critical acclaim worthless? Suddenly it becomes impossible to accredit anything with quality of any kind, accept that you like it yourself.
On the reverse side, total objectivity can be a force of arrogance and elitism. Quality is inherent in a work and personal interaction with that work changes nothing. Phenomenology means nothing and by extension even the audience mean nothing, because the truth is above all of us.
These horrific critical dystopias are exactly the reason why I believe we should respect the paradox. Writing off any part of the judgment spectrum will only make us paranoid. Let us just be happy in our ignorance and remain open to either side, making solid judgments or acknowledging personal influence whenever we deem necessary. A self-doubting  or arrogant critic will only worsen the crisis in criticism – what are we for?

No comments:

Post a Comment