New Book Looks At Virtue As An Art Form
Virtuism: Philosophy and the Aesthetics of Virtue is a philosophy book about the art of human virtue, how virtuous acts produce in us the same experience as great works of art. Witnessing or creating a virtuous act produces the same experience as does good art. The giving of the good feeling of the aesthetic or "art" experience gives evidence that life has a higher meaning. The book discusses other philosophical implications of this relationship.
(PRWEB) December 18, 2005 -- "Virtuism: Philosophy and the Aesthetics of Virtue," written by R.S. Pearson, was recently published by Telical Books of Seattle, Washington.
Virtuism: Philosophy and the Aesthetics of Virtue is a philosophy book that draws on art and ethics. Virtuism started in the mid-1980's as an art theory. The author was a young art theorist who was striving to do something new in the art world. Since everything shocking and scandalous seemingly had been done in the arts at that time, Virtuism became about the art of human virtue, how virtuous acts produce in us the same experience as great works of art. The author describes in his book how witnessing or creating a virtuous act produces the "aesthetic" or art experience. The book argues that the giving of the good feeling that is like an art experience from virtue actually gives evidence that life has a higher meaning, since in fact the experience we get from art is so pleasant.
One area the author discusses is how modern philosophy states that the existence of a benevolent God can not be proven, but then modern philosophers go on anyway to write books overshadowed with the idea that there is no benevolent purpose to life on earth. Since the opposite view could be also taken as true, since it is supposedly equally unprovable, the book writes from the perspective of how to pragmatically get life to act benevolent to us. The book discusses other philosophical implications of this relationship such as the dubious value of religious and sectarian exclusionism, and the fact that much
social science statistics seem to prove the value of the virtues.
The author wanted to distance himself from the appearance of creating a simplistic philosophy because of the post-modernist critiques of narratives. Yet, philosophy and art are by necessity "ism-manufacturing" disciplines. For mathematics to grow, it must create new nouns and verbs, and philosophy and art must create new movements to grow. A person creating their own "ism" to the untrained mind is looked at dubiously. Yet, every century, there are hundreds of new "isms" and new schools of thought created by academics and artists because of the ever present necessity for change and growth.
The author noted in 2003 how people were starting to use the word "Virtuism" without reference to his writings. Even though he had been self-publishing smaller versions of his ideas since 1984, he realized it would be a good idea to finally get a finalized copy in print.
The book is divided into forty short chapters. Some chapters tackle arguments against the idea of good and bad existing at all, an idea which is sometimes argued in philosophy. Other chapters help the reader see how leading a virtuous life can be connected to ideas of beauty. One chapter is titled "Scrupulosity as a Way of Avoiding True Virtue." Another is called, "A Virtuist Perspective on the Philosophical Concept of Power." One of the most interesting parts of the book is when the author looks at doing acts of virtue as an art form.
The author was born and raised in New York and resettled to Seattle in 1982. He started self-publishing "Virtue Manifestoes" in 1984, and distributed them via creating small magazines with the themes of the manifestoes. In 1992, he started ParaMind Brainstorming Software, which is a software product that uses the idea of "exhausting the interactions of words" to develop new ideas related to the user's typed-in sentence.
"Virtuism: Philosophy and the Aesthetics of Virtue," published by Telical Books, can be purchased online at Amazon.com, by special order at Barnes and Nobles or any bookstore, or by sending $19.95 to Telical Books, P.O. Box 27401, Seattle, WA 98165-2401.
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