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Reflective equilibrium, aesthetic appreciation, and aesthetic judgement

Smith, Murray (2025) Reflective equilibrium, aesthetic appreciation, and aesthetic judgement. Synthese, 205 (178). ISSN 0039-7857. E-ISSN 1573-0964. (doi:10.1007/s11229-025-04928-5) (KAR id:109627)

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Abstract

I explore the relevance of reflective equilibrium to aesthetic experience, judgement, and appreciation, framing this project in both descriptive and normative terms. I begin with an exposition of reflective equilibrium, construed as a theory of epistemic justification, and of aesthetic appreciation, characterised as an activity with an epistemic goal—namely, achieving an optimal understanding of an artwork or aesthetic object. I stress the broad purview of reflective equilibrium, as well as Rawls’ arguments on the importance of aesthetic activity in human experience, and thus its place in a theory of justice. These preliminary considerations set up a more detailed exploration of reflective equilibrium in action in the aesthetic domain. I develop the argument with reference to a range of cases, from mainstream filmmaking to twelve-tone composition, considering the place of reflective equilibrium in aesthetic appreciation in both its individual and collective guises, as well as its “wide” and “narrow” forms. I demonstrate how the application of reflective equilibrium in the context of the critical appreciation of art relates to a range of significant issues in aesthetics, via the examination of arguments from Sontag, Sibley, Walton, Carroll, and Gaut (among others). Finally I assess various objections to, and extensions of, the main argument, including the objection that aesthetic appreciation does not aim at understanding, and the proposal that the embodied, emotional dimension of aesthetic experience, which must be accommodated by reflective equilibrium in the context of aesthetics, may shed light on its nature and operation in other domains.

Item Type: Article
DOI/Identification number: 10.1007/s11229-025-04928-5
Projects: Character Engagement and Moral Understanding
Uncontrolled keywords: Reflective equilibrium, aesthetic appreciation, aesthetic experience, aesthetic judgement, artistic value, aesthetic value, art, wide and narrow reflective equilibrium, individual and collective reflective equilibrium, hard cases, imagination, emotion, embodied cognition, reflective afterlife, film, novel, song, music
Subjects: B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion
N Visual Arts
Institutional Unit: Schools > School of Arts and Architecture > Arts
Former Institutional Unit:
Divisions > Division of Arts and Humanities > School of Arts
Depositing User: Murray Smith
Date Deposited: 14 Apr 2025 10:31 UTC
Last Modified: 22 Jul 2025 09:22 UTC
Resource URI: https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/109627 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes)

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