This seems to be the Haskell equivalent

Rainer Deyke rainerd at eldwood.com
Tue Dec 22 19:41:31 PST 2009


Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
> Rainer Deyke wrote:
>> His entire argument seems to hinge on the idea that the difference
>> between a good artist and a bad artist is that the better artist has
>> better taste.  Which is complete and utter bullshit.  The good artist is
>> good because he has the skill to better express his taste, not because
>> his taste itself is superior.  He can create things that are more
>> beautiful (a technical skill), but only for his own sense of beauty.
> 
> I'm not sure. Actually to be frank I completely disagree. I'm trained in
> music and my father is an architect and painter; I see/hear plenty of
> work by artists that technically are very skilled but have poor taste.

That statement pretty much presumes that you are qualified to judge
other people's taste.  In other words, if you don't like it, then it's
objectively bad.  Your own taste is objectively perfect, and the closer
some other person's taste resembles your own, the better it is.

Even if I did believe in an objective measure of taste, I wouldn't
believe that your taste is the platonic ideal to which we should aspire.

The ability to enjoy a work of art (i.e. "taste") is one thing, the
ability to create a work of art that is enjoyed is another.  The former
is subjective, the latter presumes the former but is otherwise a
technical skill.


-- 
Rainer Deyke - rainerd at eldwood.com



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