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Aestheticism Quotes
I am beginning to understand why renunciation has become sovereign in Germany, why an agony paralyses the spirits; why the few heads still living fall prey, partly to a fruitless aestheticism, partly to a fatal belief in evolution. Whether we will or not, we succumb to an overpowering system of profanation that is difficult to escape because there is barely any possibility of spiritual and material existence outside of it.
Hugo Ball
Nordic art casts a spell on the mind which ranges from laughter to tears and from tears to violent rage. One can see how dangerous it is, we can be tyrannized by a cynical person endowed with the power of art. Much has been said about this demonic aspect. In it lies the ultimate demand that the artist must take responsibility for the states of mind that he produces, or at least he must answer for them by knowing them in his own person. This psychic demand in both the artist and the viewer has made Expressionist art so hated by devotees of aestheticism and formalism.
Asger Jorn
Contemplation does not mean abject surrender to every "mystical" impression that comes in. It is no sentimental aestheticism or emotional piety to which you are being invited: nor shall the transcending of reason ever be achieved by way of spiritual silliness.
Evelyn Underhill
Nehamas invokes Nietzsche's talk of the "eternal basic text of homo natura” (BGE 230, quoted above) as evidence of aestheticism--the view, recall, that "texts can be interpreted equally well in vastly different and deeply incompatible ways” (p. 3). But the talk of "text” in this passage is actually incompatible with aestheticism. For in this passage, as we have seen, Nietzsche asserts that prior claims to "knowledge” have been superficial precisely because they have ignored the "eternal basic text”- ewigen Grundtext-of man conceived as a natural organism. That this text is eternal and basic implies not that it "can be interpreted equally well in vastly different and deeply incompatible ways” but just the opposite: readings which do not treat man naturalistically misread the text-they "falsify” it. It is these misreadings, of course, that Nietzsche, ever the "good philologist,” aims to correct.
Brian Leiter