Movement, Wildness and Animal Aesthetics

Environmental Values 28 (4):449-470 (2019)
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Abstract

The key role that animals play in our aesthetic appreciation of the natural world has only gradually been highlighted in discussions in environmental aesthetics. In this article I make use of the phenomenological notion of ‘perceptual sense’ as developed by Merleau-Ponty to argue that open-ended expressive-responsive movement is the primary aesthetic ground for our appreciation of animals. It is through their movement that the array of qualities we admire in animals are manifest qua animal qualities. Against functionalist and formalist accounts, I defend and develop an account of expressive-responsive movement as the primary perceptual sense of animals. I go on to suggest that the primacy of movement in the aesthetic appreciation of animals is also the primary sense of animal ‘wildness’, and that a key part of the rewilding paradigm should be the development of such appreciation.

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Tom Greaves
University of East Anglia

References found in this work

Environmental Aesthetics and Rewilding.Jonathan Prior & Emily Brady - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (1):31-51.
The Aesthetics of Environment.Arnold Berleant & Stephen Bourassa - 1994 - Environmental Values 3 (2):173-182.
Formal natural beauty.Nick Zangwill - 2001 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 101 (2):209–224.
The Ethics of Animal Beauty.Samantha Vice - 2017 - Environmental Ethics 39 (1):75-96.

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