ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ Philosophy Society: βCan Beautiful Wine Express Kantian Aesthetic Ideas?β (Dr. Rachel Cristy)
Friday 15 November 15:30 until 17:00
ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ Campus : Arts A108
Speaker: Dr. Rachel Cristy (King's College London)
Part of the series: ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ Philosophy Society
On Friday 15 November at 3:30-5 (London time), the ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ Philosophy Society will host Dr. Rachel Cristy (King’s College London) for an in-person Research Seminar entitled “Can Beautiful Wine Express Kantian Aesthetic Ideas?” There is no Zoom component for this event in the Philosophy Society series. The talk will be held in Arts A 108 on the ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ campus, Falmer, Brighton BN1 9RH. Talks are open to the public, and all are welcome to attend and share the event information. The ίΟίΟΚΣΖ΅ Philosophy Society is a Local Partner of .
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Speaker: Dr. Rachel Cristy (Lecturer in Philosophy, King’s College London)
Title: “Can Beautiful Wine Express Kantian Aesthetic Ideas?”
Abstract: In previous work, I have argued that despite Kant’s own claim to the contrary, his theory of taste permits us to appropriately judge that some wines are beautiful (not merely agreeable), and that wines deliberately ‘composed’ by a winemaker can be regarded as works of art. The possibility that some wines may be works of beautiful art raises a further question within the Kantian framework: what aesthetic ideas do such wines express? An aesthetic idea, Kant says in the Third Critique, is ‘a representation of the imagination, associated with a given concept, which is combined with such a manifold of partial representations in the free use of the imagination that no expression designating a determinate concept can be found for it’ (KU 5:316, §49). Kant suggests that the concepts with which aesthetic ideas are associated are always ideas of reason: transcendent metaphysical and moral concepts traditionally connected with religion (e.g., God, freedom, goodness). But given that this requirement would artificially restrict the possible subject matter of beautiful art, I argue that a suitably expanded conception could allow for the possibility that certain wines express aesthetic ideas. Specifically, I suggest that some of the most beautiful wines express aesthetic ideas associated with the concept of terroir: they represent a particular place (the vineyard) over a specific span of time (the growing season) via a different medium than, say, a landscape painting, at best in such a way that the ‘partial representations’ brought forth by the imagination cannot be exhausted by any finite conceptual description.
You can find out more about the speaker .
By: Robyn Waller
Last updated: Friday, 8 November 2024