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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

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Undergraduate Module Fair
R0.12 & R0.14
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Research and Impact Committee
S1.50
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CRPLA talk: 'Appreciation as a Process, and Well-being' with Daniel Star (Boston University)
S0.17

CRPLA Talk Wed 13 May, 4pm S0.17 

Daniel Star (Boston University)

Appreciation as a Process, and Well-being (from a coauthored project with Joel Van Fossen)

Aesthetic appreciation is here understood to be an at least partly conscious process, with respect to which agents exercise a significant degree of intentional control, that involves attending to objects and their aesthetic properties, where such are objects are taken to be worth appreciating aesthetically, and cognitively and affectively engaging with them. There are significant differences between this process and two other mental processes about which more has been written: practical deliberation and epistemic inquiry. Some of the similarities and differences between these processes concern the metaphysics of them, but some concern the value and role of the processes. One important conclusion reached is that appreciation, unlike the other two processes, is primarily to be valued in itself as a process, rather than merely instrumentally in relation to the value of its outcomes. And the fact that this is how appreciation is to be properly valued is closely related to what appreciation does for us, so far as our well-being is concerned. A key alternative for what might be thought to be of primary value as a product of appreciation — correct aesthetic judgment — is considered and rejected.

 

 

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See also:
Centre for Research in Philosophy, Literature & The Arts Events
糖心TV Mind and Action Research Centre (WMA)
Arts Faculty Events

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