Silvanus said:
This is such a very empty statement. You do not genuinely believe that the potential of art to communicate is no greater than that of toilet paper;
I believe that the potential of art to communicate is 100% in the interpretation. A blind man cannot draw a drop of meaning from a painting, nor can a deaf man feel a single shred of joy from a concert. The entirety of expression from art lies purely in the interpretation of the art itself, more traditionally defined with the aforism "Beauty lies in the eye of the beholder". Furthermore, art has no future-predicting powers, else we'd see more of it working in the stock exchange. You are ofcourse free to argue that point, but I have yet to see a study where art outperforms predictive algorithms in any field.
As for toilet paper saying things about us as humans, it again goes back to the interpretation. Without a frame of reference or the ability to interpret within the context (i.e. only an objective measurement), art is as communicating as toiletpaper.
in order to draw that tortured conclusion requires one to reduce art down to what can be claimed of it objectively.
I fail to see how you draw this conclusion, especially in light of my previous post. Waaait, didn't you claim I was a "cynic" for "needlessly" stating that art was purely subjective?
Objectively, yes, art is as meaningful as anything we do, but only a post or two ago you were decrying the idiocy of making objective statements about art.
And I still do. I think you have taken a turn in some direction other than the way I was going. If art has no objective meaning, how can it have an objective interpretation of any meaning? Judging a table on how well it can fly is possible, but it doesn't seem like a worthwhile exercise outside of some archaeology exhibit long after we're dead. Jousting windmills is an equally meaningless task.
Sophistry, in modern usage, refers to ostensibly intellectual arguments with very little of substance or relevance underneath. The above fits that to a tee.
Exactly! Wait, what are you referring to?
Perhaps, using your definition here, one could also appropriately label a statement so vague and open to interpretation that it could mean anything at all, as sophistry...
Please tell me you recognise the irony in this statement. Please. I'll lose all faith in humanity if you said this unironically.
Sorry, I haven't spent a single night in an ivory tower yet, and I can't afford an arm-chair.