
GIVE THE PERFECT GIFT
Erin Mills Town Centre Gift Cards are the perfect choice for your gift giving needs.Purchase gift cards at kiosks near the food court or centre court, at Guest Services, or click below to purchase online.PURCHASE HEREHome
Feeling and Reason the Arts
Indigo
Loading Inventory...
Feeling and Reason the Arts
By None
Current price: $186.50


By None
Feeling and Reason the Arts
Current price: $186.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
First published in 1985,Feeling and Reason in the Artsraises an important question-how can a central role for the arts, and in particular the arts in education, be justified? The arts and the artistic judgments are often expressions of individual feeling and value, and it is a common belief that this necessarily implies a subjectivism that is incompatible with the notion that artistic judgments can be rationally supported. If this belief is correct there is clearly a problem about how the arts can be justified in education.This book shows that this dilemma can be resolved only if one recognises that it is created by incoherently narrow and oversimple conceptions of rational justification and feeling. With more adequate conceptions, a sound argument can be provided for the place and value of the arts, in education, and in society more generally. Clearly these issues are of crucial practical relevance at a time when the arts are under threat. This exposition of arguments in their support is important and timely. This is an interesting work for scholars and researchers of arts and philosophy.
First published in 1985,Feeling and Reason in the Artsraises an important question-how can a central role for the arts, and in particular the arts in education, be justified? The arts and the artistic judgments are often expressions of individual feeling and value, and it is a common belief that this necessarily implies a subjectivism that is incompatible with the notion that artistic judgments can be rationally supported. If this belief is correct there is clearly a problem about how the arts can be justified in education.This book shows that this dilemma can be resolved only if one recognises that it is created by incoherently narrow and oversimple conceptions of rational justification and feeling. With more adequate conceptions, a sound argument can be provided for the place and value of the arts, in education, and in society more generally. Clearly these issues are of crucial practical relevance at a time when the arts are under threat. This exposition of arguments in their support is important and timely. This is an interesting work for scholars and researchers of arts and philosophy.


















