实用主义美学中自主性的演变

C. Haskins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为自然主义者,实用主义美学的作家在讨论艺术和审美经验时,倾向于避免最初康德唯心主义的术语“自主性”。即便如此,一个更普遍的自主性概念,强调艺术和美学构成了经验的规范特殊方面,已经隐含在许多实用主义美学文献中,包括约翰·杜威开创性的艺术作为经验。随着文化学科超越了早期现代主义和后现代主义时代关于艺术在生活过程中完全自主或完全“他法自主”吸收的争论,我认为,在一个充满社会、环境和存在危机的世纪里,上述一般自治思想的一个更自然、更接地气的版本仍然是不可或缺的,这些危机的解决方案需要一种充满艺术色彩的体验可以激发的创造性代理。借鉴关键的实用主义主题,我进一步发展了一般自治的想法,认为美术内外的审美体验是水平超越的;艺术和美学满足了人类对体验的持续需求,这种体验在本质上是有益的,同时也服务于救赎的工具功能;为此,我们的全球文化需要在语言和经验中提供集体可访问的自主空间,帮助人们探索和询问我们个人和集体行为的意义;我们关于艺术的理论信仰的价值不在于它们代表一个独立于人类思想和行为的世界的能力,而在于它们引导我们在这个世界上做什么。最后,我通过阅读理查德·鲍尔斯的小说《上层故事》来说明这种对一般自治思想的实用主义解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Evolution of Autonomy in Pragmatist Aesthetics
Writers in pragmatist aesthetics tend, as naturalists, to avoid the originally Kantian-Idealist term “autonomy” when discussing art and aesthetic experience. Even so, a more general autonomy concept, emphasizing that art and the aesthetic comprise a normatively special aspect of experience, is already implicit in much of the pragmatist aesthetics literature, including in John Dewey’s seminal Art as Experience. As the cultural disciplines move beyond earlier modernist- and postmodernist-era debates about art’s total autonomy from or total “heteronomous” absorption within the processes of life, I argue that a more naturalistically down-to-earth version of the above general autonomy idea remains indispensable in a century of social, environmental, and existential crises whose solutions demand creative agency of a kind that artistically charged experiences can inspire. Drawing upon key pragmatist themes, I further develop the general autonomy idea by arguing that aesthetic experiences within and without the fine arts are horizontally transcendent; that art and the aesthetic answer a persistent human need for experiences that are intrinsically rewarding while also serving the instrumental function of being redemptive; that to this end, our global culture needs collectively accessible autonomous spaces within language and experience that can help people explore and interrogate the meanings of what we individually and collectively do; and that the value of our theoretical beliefs about the arts lies not in their power to represent a world supposedly independent of human thought and action but in what they lead us to do in the world. In conclusion, I illustrate this pragmatic interpretation of the general autonomy idea with a reading of Richard Powers’ novel The Overstory.
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