Artistry as Methodology: Aesthetic Experience and Chinese Philosophy

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Abstract

Although aesthetics has been to some extent marginalized in western philosophy, within the Chinese philosophical tradition aesthetics plays a key role. This article explores Chinese aesthetics as a site of valuable resources for rethinking the ways in which we conceptualize philosophical activity. After introducing a few distinct features of the Chinese aesthetic tradition, the article examines aesthetic distance in terms of  guan he , and  ying , Chinese conceptions of artists and participants, and aesthetic suggestiveness or the inexhaustibility of a work of art, in order to suggest that the Chinese philosophical tradition might contribute its sense of connection between style or method of doing philosophy and aesthetics to a contemporary metaphor of philosophy as aesthetic experience.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)199-209
JournalPhilosophy Compass
Volume8
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2013

Keywords

  • Aesthetics
  • Chinese Philosophy

Disciplines

  • Epistemology
  • Sociology
  • Social and Behavioral Sciences

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