He asks us a to forget, if possible, my individual being in my peculiar circumstances. But he also admits that it won't be possible to fully do that. He does say there's some shit that gets in the way of being a good judge. That doesn't make one work of art better or worse. It really depends on his seeing it grit.
Many of us think that art is subjective, but at the same time it seems like some artistic judgments are better than others. Do you think Crash deserved to receive an award for Best Picture? Did you like Season 2 of Ted Lasso? Well you’re wrong. So how do we reconcile these two conflicting attitudes about art? David and Tamler turn to David Hume’s classic essay Of the Standard of Taste (link in notes) for help. Will Pizarro finally see the error of his ways on Straw Dogs?
Plus a doozy of a medical ethics paper – should we allow people to change their legal age if it doesn’t match their "biological" and "emotional" age?
Sponsored By:
Support Very Bad Wizards
Links: