J
Jewel34
Guest
If you think about it, you will find that greedy and dishonest behavior is the exception and not the norm. Besides, not everything produces the proper chemicals which give us the feeling of well-being. The fact of being exposed to stimuli is only a necessary, but not sufficient requirement to find something beautiful.I’m not sure that prevalence is sufficient to explain beauty though. I agree that societal influences are powerful, but there are a lot of things that are common but not beautiful. For instance, greedy and dishonest behavior is quite ubiquitous but I think that you’d be hard-pressed to find people that consider it beautiful (even greedy and dishonest people would probably not find it beautiful).
Some people found it beautiful, since their brain produced chemicals which elicited the feeling of well-being. Others were exposed to it, and started to see the subtlety and the beauty of it. We have the ability to adapt to different stimuli and environments. Learning is one of our most important features.I think this is the crux of the matter though. If Mozart was not initially considered beautiful, then why is it considered beautiful now? Making recourse to societal influences doesn’t quite explain it because at its inception, Mozart had to at least find it beautiful and then convince others that it was beautiful.
This is precisely the Platonic worldview. He considered the “ideal abstractions” to be primary, and the material manifestations of them just a crude approximation of the ideal forms. A typical example of putting the cart in front of the horse. Here is a question for you: “what is the ideal, perfect, abstract excrement, the crude approximation of which we produce every morning”? Does it have a “perfect, ideal, abstract stench”?I don’t think there is a reason in principle why concepts, morals, and abstractions cannot exist independently of matter.
If to be a “human” one needs that “soul”, then it is essential to p(name removed by moderator)oint to moment of ensoulment. Prior to that, by your standards, there is only a conglomerate of cells, but no human being. The fact that the church does not have an official teaching on the subject is very important.I understand that we don’t know exactly when ensoulment occurs, but ensoulment doesn’t necessarily entail that the soul is created at the moment of ensoulment.
Let me paraphrase. If “walking” exists, we cannot connect to it by our leg muscles alone.If abstractions and morals exist, we cannot connect to them using material objects alone.