Abstract
Plato’s concepts of art and aesthetics encompass the core elements of his philosophical principles. Specifically, Plato shows how art becomes an imitation of an imitation: a clear reference to the philosopher’s concept of forms. Within Plato’s philosophy of art being nothing more than an imitation of an imitation is a value judgment, because Plato proposes that anything that is an imitation is also something that distracts and distorts reality. In other words, art can adversely impact the human ability to use reason. However, art served a fundamentally different purpose in ancient Greece than it does in the twenty-first century. Plato’s philosophy of art and aesthetics can seem anachronistic in light of the role art plays in postmodern society. When viewed in light of the role art played in ancient Greece, though, Plato’s philosophy of art showcases the logic behind the allegory of the cave in the Republic. Essentially, art can be little more than an imitation of an imitation when it remains derivative and unconscious of the political import of human creative acts.
Introduction
Every person has at some point viewed art that is little more than an imitation: works that depict scenes from daily life, portraits, still life scenes, or landscapes. Even when art becomes imbued with emotional intensity or is executed well, elevating the senses to appreciation, awe and wonder, it is still little more than entertainment. Plato considered art in this way: as something frivolous at best and at worst, even dangerous due to its ability to distract the mind from what is true and real (“Plato,” n.d.). According to Plato, then, beauty can only be located in the truth. Art can lead the person to contemplate and appreciate aesthetic beauty, but can never lead the person to truth.
Furthermore, art is defined by its being created by human beings. Human beings already have a distorted sense of reality. In Plato’s Republic, the philosopher relays his concept of the Forms. Using the allegory of the cave, Plato shows how the majority of what the human mind perceives is a distortion of reality. The allegory showcases a group of people in a cave who become fascinated by the shadows dancing on the wall instead of venturing outside the cave to discover the source of the shadows: the sun and the light that refracts off of physical objects. A person who does leave the cave to perceive the truth may be ostracized from society, but at least that person possesses great power in knowing the truth about reality.
Using this same analogy of the cave and the shadows created by the sun, art would be like cave drawings. Plato wants his audience to understand that art is an imitation of an imitation. Like the child’s game of telephone, the root message becomes distorted when it is filtered through successive layers of consciousness. Plato believes in the existence of an absolute truth that is independent of the human mind, and suggests that the human mind mistakes illusion for reality. Becoming overly wrapped...
References
Brook, E. (2008). Art imitating art. https://contempaesthetics.org/newvolume/pages/article.php?articleID=516
Pappas, N. (2016). Plato’s aesthetics. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-aesthetics/
Plato. Apology. Translated by B. Jowett. Retrieved from: http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/apology.html
Plato. Republic. Translated by T. Sheehan. Retrieved from: https://web.stanford.edu/class/ihum40/cave.pdf
“Plato,” (n.d.). Retrieved from: http://users.rowan.edu/~clowney/Aesthetics/philos_artists_onart/plato.htm
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