Philosophy of Art and Empirical Aesthetics: Resistance and Rapprochement
Abstract
The philosophy of art and empirical aesthetics are, to all outward appearances, natural
bedfellows, disciplines bound together by complimentary methodologies and the common goal of
explaining a shared subject matter. Philosophers are in the business of sorting out the ontological
and normative character of different categories of objects, events and behaviors, squaring up our
conception of the nature of things, and clarifying the subject matter of different avenues of
intellectual exploration via careful conceptual analyses of often complex conventional practices.
Psychologists have developed careful empirical methods for measuring and modeling behavior,
methods that are fruitfully used in practice to test and evaluate hypotheses derived from our
conception of the nature of our own cognitive and emotional engagement with the world. So, for
all appearances, philosophy and psychology are grounded in complimentary research methods
directed at the common task of sorting and testing theories about the nature of art and artistic
practices, e.g. what is an artwork, what is the nature of the productive practices involved in
creating these kinds of artifacts, or what is the nature of a consumer's artistic engagement with
these artifacts. Unfortunately appearances can be deceptive. Despite common calls for
rapprochement the two disciplines rarely meet. There are methodological and ideological reasons
for this rift, and they are, not surprisingly, related. In what follows I will explore and evaluate
some of the central sources of resistance on both sides this divide, introduce a model for the
possibility of rapprochement, and briefly sketch the promise and pitfalls of current research in
two areas, dance and film, where an active attempt at bridging the divide between philosophy and
empirical aesthetics is underway