AESTHETICS
- Academic year
- 2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ESTETICA SP.
- Course code
- FM0068 (AF:313102 AR:169046)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- M-FIL/04
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
Applying knowledge and understanding: As a further goal, students should achieve the capacity to use concepts and arguments arising from the aesthetic debate to interpret the different forms of artistic productions and, more generally, the cultural world.
Making judgments: The course is intended to provide some basic tools for a critical reconstruction of the debate on the naturalization of the arts.
By the end of the course, students should gain adequate communicative skills apt to analysing the current debate and expressing their own evaluations with clarity as well as on the basis of convenient arguments.
Pre-requirements
Contents
At least since the time of Kant and Schiller, philosophical aesthetics questioned the links between art and nature, as well as between art and human nature. The course will engage with the main positions of the contemporary debate on the question of the natural roots of artistic practices, highlighting the divergences between reductionist positions, continuity and emergentism.
Four major areas of the current debate will be considered: pragmatist or neo-pragmatist aesthetics (Dewey, Margolis, Johnson), theories on the evolutionary origins of the arts (Dutton, Davies, Dissanayake), so-called neuroaesthetic (Zeki, Starr, Chatterjee) and embodied aesthetics (Noe, Gallese, Gallagher).
Referral texts
Students are requested to contact the teachers for establishing an agreement about the selection of texts representing a basis for the writing of one's own essay.
First Part:
- Zeki S. (2003), La visione dall’interno. Arte e cervello, Torino: Bollati Boringhieri.
- Chatterjee, A , A., Vartanian (2014), “Neuroaesthetics”, Trends in Cognitive Neuroscience, 18(7): 370-375
- Starr, G. (2013), Feeling Beauty: The Neuroscience of Aesthetic Experience, Cambridge: The MIT Press
- Pearce M. et al. (2016) “Neuroaesthetics: The Cognitive Neuroscience of Cognitive Experience”, Perspectives on Psychological Science, 11(2): 265-279.
- Pelowski M. et al. (2017) “Move me, astonish me. . . delight my eyes and brain: The Vienna Integrated Model of top-down and bottom-up processes in Art Perception (VIMAP) and corresponding affective, evaluative, and neurophysiological correlates” Physics of Life Review, 21: 80-125.
Second Part:
- Dutton, D. (2009), The Art Instinct, Oxford U.P.
- Miller, G. (2001), Aesthetic fitness: How sexual selection shaped artistic virtuosity as a fitness indicator and aesthetic preferences as mate choice criteria, Bulletin of Psychology and The Arts, Bulletin of Psychology and the Arts
- Pinker, S. (2000), Il senso della vita, in Come funziona la mente, Mondadori
- Tooby, Cosmides (2001), Does Beauty Build Adapted Minds? Toward an Evolutionary Theory of Aesthetics, Fiction and the Arts, SubStance 94/95
- Dissanayake, E. (1980), Art as a Human Behavior: An Ethological View of Art, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism
- Dissanayake, E. (1992),The Core of Art: Making Special, in Homo Aestheticus: Where Art Come From an Why, Free Press
- Dissanayake, E. (2008), The Arts After Darwin: Does Art Have an Origin and Adaptive Function?, in in Kitty Zijlmans & Wilfried van Damme (eds.), World Art Studies: Exploring Concepts and Approaches. Amsterdam: Valiz.
- Dissanayake, E. (2009), The Artification Hypothesis and its Relevance to Cognitive Science, Evolutionary Aesthetics, and Neuroaesthetics, Cognitive Semiotics, 5:
Third Part:
- Dewey J. ((1989) Art as Experience, The Later Works, 1925-1953, Volume 10: 1934, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale & Edwardsville;traduzione italiana a cura di G.Matteucci, Arte come esperienza, Aesthetica Edizioni
- Margolis, J. (2009), The Arts and the Definition of the Human, Stanford University Press
- Margolis, J. (2004), Placing Artworks, Placing Ourselves, Journal of Chinese Philosophy
- Johnson, M. (2007), The Meaning of the Body. Aesthetics of Human Understanding, University of Chicago Press
Fourth Part:
- Freedberg, D.; Gallese, V. (2007). “Motion, emotion and empathy in esthetic experience”, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 11(5): 197–203.
- Gallagher, S. (2011), “Aesthetics and kinaesthetics”, In J. M. Krois (a cura di), Sehen und Handeln. Akademie Verlag: John Wiley and Sons, Inc, pp. 99-113.
- Gallese, V. (2018) “The power of images: A view from the brain-body” Phenomenology and Mind 14
- Gallagher, S. (2017), "Enactivist interventions: Rethinking the Mind, Oxford: Oxford UP.
- Noe A. (2015), Strange Tools. Art and Human Nature, New York: Hill & Wang.
- Fingerhut, J. (2018) “Enactive Aesthetics and Neuroaesthetics”, Phenomenology and Mind 14: 80-97.
Assessment methods
The test will assess whether the students have been able to analyze and deepen the field of investigation of the essay, if they know how to orient themselves effectively in the literature, if they can clearly report the theses of the authors considered and if they are able to formulate interpretative thesis on their own, supporting them with appropriate arguments and communicating them with critical awareness and independent judgment.
Teaching methods
Teaching language
Further information
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
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