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OverviewWhat gives us the right to say that something is beautiful? In an age where aesthetics is increasingly reduced to personal preference, emotional reaction, or cultural fashion, Propositional Aesthetics makes a bold and unfashionable claim: aesthetic judgment is a serious, normative act, and beauty is accountable to reason, form, and authority-not feeling alone. This book does not ask how art makes us feel. It asks by what authority we judge it at all. Drawing on philosophy, theology, and rigorous conceptual analysis, S. C. Sayles dismantles the modern assumption that aesthetics must begin with experience. Instead, he restores beauty to its proper jurisdiction-as a claim about order, proportion, harmony, terror, and even ugliness, all of which can be rightly or wrongly perceived. Judgment, in this account, is not authoritarian or elitist; it is the very condition that makes disagreement, criticism, and endurance possible. Across thirteen tightly argued propositions and sustained chapters, Sayles demonstrates: Why aesthetics cannot begin with feeling without collapsing into psychology Why beauty is not an added value but a disclosure of order Why form is prior to expression, and constraint the condition of meaning Why harmony is not sentiment, limit is not repression, and terror is not anti-aesthetic Why ugliness can be truthful, and why taste is a cultivated, corrigible capacity Why modern aesthetics, in fleeing authority, has produced fragmentation rather than freedom The book culminates in its uncompromising terminal claim: ""Beauty is not what pleases without question, but what endures under judgment."" This is not a guide to taste, a canon of approved works, or a therapeutic defence of art. It is a recovery of aesthetics as a domain of responsibility-where claims can be argued, corrected, defended, and sustained over time. For readers dissatisfied with relativism, sceptical of sentimentality, and unwilling to surrender beauty to fashion or power, Propositional Aesthetics offers a rigorous alternative: beauty restored to judgment, and judgment restored to meaning Modern aesthetics speaks constantly in the language of evaluation while denying the authority that would make evaluation meaningful. Beauty is reduced to preference, feeling, or cultural signal-yet judgments persist, ungrounded and unaccountable. In Propositional Aesthetics: Form, Judgment, and the Authority of Beauty, S. C. Sayles confronts this contradiction at its root. Rejecting both aesthetic relativism and prescriptive taste-making, Sayles recovers aesthetics as a domain of judgment-where claims about beauty can be made, challenged, corrected, and sustained. This book argues that beauty is not an emotional overlay but a disclosure of order; that form is not optional but the condition of intelligibility; and that authority in aesthetics binds claims to reasons without coercing persons. From harmony and proportion to terror and ugliness, Sayles shows how even the most unsettling works can bear aesthetic truth when governed by form. Neither a canon nor a theory of taste, Propositional Aesthetics is a rigorous re-grounding of what must be true for aesthetic disagreement to make sense at all. Its final claim is as bracing as it is unfashionable: Beauty is not what pleases without question, but what endures under judgment. For readers seeking an alternative to sentimentality, relativism, and aesthetic evasion, this book restores beauty to seriousness-and judgment to meaning. Full Product DetailsAuthor: S C SaylesPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.327kg ISBN: 9798243115513Pages: 242 Publication Date: 08 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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