
The Aesthetics of Design offers the first full treatment of design in the field of philosophical aesthetics. Aesthetic theory has traditionally occupied itself with fine art in all its forms, sometimes with craft, and often with notions of beauty and sublimity in art and nature. In so doing, it has largely ignored the quotidian and familiar objects and experiences that make up our daily lives. Yet how we interact with design involves aesthetic choices and judgements as well as practical, cognitive and moral considerations. This work challenges the discipline to broaden its scope to include design, and illustrates how aesthetics helps define our human concerns.Subjecting design to as rigorous a treatment as any other aesthetic object exposes it to three main challenges that form the core of this book. First, design must be distinguished from art and craft as a unique kind of object meriting separate philosophical attention, and is here defined in part by its functional qualities. Second, the experience of design must be defended as having a particularly aesthetic nature. Here Forsey adapts the Kantian notion of dependent beauty to provide a model for our appreciation of design as different from our judgements of art, craft and natural beauty. Finally, design is important for aesthetics and philosophy as a whole in that it is implicated in broader human concerns. Forsey situates her theory of design as a constructive contribution to the recent movement of Everyday Aesthetics, which seeks to re-enfranchise philosophical aesthetics as an important part of philosophy at large.
This work investigates whether design warrants a distinct place within the field of philosophical aesthetics, traditionally dominated by fine art and nature. Jane Forsey, a scholar in the field, argues that the quotidian objects of our daily lives possess aesthetic qualities that require rigorous philosophical examination. By integrating design into the broader discourse of Everyday Aesthetics, she challenges the discipline to move beyond traditional boundaries and address the functional and moral dimensions of human-made objects.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational text for integrating design into the broader canon of philosophical aesthetics. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for students and scholars of philosophy rather than general design practitioners.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2016-02-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019060042X
ISBN-13:
9780190600426
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