- Fri May 07, 2021 4:30 pm
#86897
ashpine,
That's the exact problem with the stimulus - the author thinks that because there is wide interpersonal variation in emotional impact, this variation will also be reflected among connoisseurs. Look at the sentence right before the conclusion: the author is claiming "there's a big range of different emotional impacts on different people." Conclusion: "Connoisseurs will also experience a great range of emotional impacts, so we can't rely on the consistency of these impacts to authenticate paintings."
Imagine emotional impact comes in four flavors: Pity, Indignation, Sublimity, Joy. The author's penultimate sentence seems to indicate that, if we took 1,000 people, we'd likely find the following:
250 people said that the primary emotional impact the painting had on them was one of Pity
250 people said that the primary emotional impact the painting had on them was one of Indignation
250 people said that the primary emotional impact the painting had on them was one of Sublimity
250 people said that the primary emotional impact the painting had on them was one of Joy
The author concludes that, if a connoisseur judges that a painting must be an authentic Rembrandt if it evokes Pity, but not authentic if it does something else, then the diversity of opinions mentioned above casts doubt on this way of judging authenticity.
The problem is, it's certainly possible that, though, as in my example above, people in general might differ in the emotional impacts they feel, maybe connoisseurs are consistent with each other in their responses. So, although a "person on the street" might have a 25% chance of feeling any particular emotion because of a Rembrandt, maybe connoisseurs ALL feel Pity - then the emotional impact IS a good way for connoisseurs to judge paintings' authenticity.
Robert Carroll