- Sun Jul 07, 2024 1:50 pm
#107376
I think you've added a concept to the stimulus that the author never discussed, nshakfeh. There's nothing in the stimulus about feelings. You may have brought in some assumptions there that you should have left out of your analysis.
The stimulus claims that the only thing relevant to aesthetics (which deals with appearances, whether something is beautiful to look at) is what is directly presented to us in the painting, and that everything symbolic is irrelevant to that analysis. Symbolism might have something to do with our feelings - we don't know, since that wasn't discussed - but the author is claiming that symbolism has nothing to do with outward, physical beauty. How do we prove that? Since the author claimed that only the intrinsic properties matter in an aesthetic analysis, we have to say that the symbolic stuff is not intrinsic.
As for answer D, even if an artwork could symbolize nothing, that wouldn't prove that symbolism isn't relevant to aesthetics. Painting A might symbolize nothing, but what if Painting B did symbolize something, and that symbolism was intrinsic in the work, affecting our aesthetic judgment of it? We need an answer that eliminates that possibility if we want to justify the conclusion here.
Be careful about how you interpret the stimulus! Don't turn it into something it isn't. I like to say that it helps to be more like a robot in how you analyze these things, setting aside any creativity and personal judgment. As soon as we start to think to ourselves "well, couldn't this thing they said mean something else that they didn't say," we are setting ourselves up for trap answers. Keep it limited to the words they said, and the clear meaning of those words, and you'll be on safer ground, especially when you want to very mechanically perfect the connection between the premises and the conclusion in a Justify question.
Adam M. Tyson
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