universe34
Member
Does the old adage hold true? Is beauty truly subjective, or is there a way to quantify it? I want to see someone mathematically quantify beauty. This should be interesting.
Bad pickup line: If looks could kill, you'd be a Beholder, or maybe Medusa.Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder
I have asked this question of myself before but since no one else has ever asked it I know, I never thought much on it in depth. Being of mathematical bent I'd love to come up with an answer that can be put into words. Here is what I have so far:Does the old adage hold true? Is beauty truly subjective, or is there a way to quantify it? I want to see someone mathematically quantify beauty. This should be interesting.
Please stop trying to define beauty with a single conclusive definition.
It's subjective, irrational, indefinable, not because there is no applicable definition, instead it's indefinable because there's no single applicable definition, it defies deconstruction because no matter which perspective is taken, you can never describe the entirety.
Escape the tyranny of binary thinking!
Are you talkin' to me? Huh? Isn't YOUR statement a violation of what your statement says? I meant my statement to be all inclusive. You say beauty is subjective & irrational? Remember Si? Please give example of this. Where is the irrational -- in the beholder or the beheld? If I look at Van Gogh's sunflowers, is it beautiful because it says something or ugly because it fails?Please stop trying to define beauty with a single conclusive definition.
It's subjective, irrational, indefinable, not because there is no applicable definition, instead it's indefinable because there's no single applicable definition, it defies deconstruction because no matter which perspective is taken, you can never describe the entirety.
Escape the tyranny of binary thinking!
Are those rhetorical Qs or would you like a try at answers? I'm sure some INTP will venture answers.Agreed. It's the same as trying to debate "true love".
Do blind people stop seeing beauty?
Though subjectivity is of course subjective, the concept of subjectivity to which we ascribe the label "subjectivity" is not, it's a rationalization of irrationality, for example the answer "I don't know" implies that the answerer does know that they don't know, but that's irrelevant because it's not the question that was being asked, i.e. to discover what the answerer does know, not what s/he doesn’t know.Are you talkin' to me? Huh? Isn't YOUR statement a violation of what your statement says?
In relationship between the beheld and beholders (plural).You say beauty is subjective & irrational? Remember Si? Please give example of this. Where is the irrational -- in the beholder or the beheld?
I have no idea, it's your perspective.If I look at Van Gogh's sunflowers, is it beautiful because it says something or ugly because it fails?
Are those rhetorical Qs or would you like a try at answers? I'm sure some INTP will venture answers.
Yer right. The "eye" of the beholder could be theHahaha, I suppose it's both.
It's rhetorical, but the intention was to make the observer realise a blind person could still find beauty in many things beyond the visual, (smell, touch, warmth, talking to someone, whatever that person finds beautiful is beautiful) and that arguing about 'beauty' is pointless because it is subjective, much like 'love' and by extension 'true love'.
"can a blind person still see beauty?" just implies that seeing isn't entirely visual, and beauty isn't entirely based on beauty, so it's obviously not true. Our perceptions can easily be swayed or fooled, so don't get too caught up in the visual or you might miss the rest.
Beauty is hardly ever visible at eye-level, really. I don't thonl I've ever seen a persons exterior and known them to be beautiful inside.
I'm a little uncertain how to grab the meanings of the terms "subjective" and "objective." When I talked about the system of observed and observer I was shooting to have that objective from the POV of someone outside and studying the system.Though subjectivity is of course subjective, the concept of subjectivity to which we ascribe the label "subjectivity" is not, it's a rationalization of irrationality, for example the answer "I don't know" implies that the answerer does know that they don't know, but that's irrelevant because it's not the question that was being asked, i.e. to discover what the answerer does know, not what s/he doesn’t know.
Yes each beholder views the subject differently. I know I'm skipping around but let me take this example. We can later see if it can be generalized. I once wanted to claim this woman "beautiful." If that's true as objective observers we would try to define what viewers see that makes this so:Defining the label “subjective” doesn’t undermine the subjectivity of subjectivity.
In relationship between the beheld and beholders (plural).
Hence the term "subject-tivity", because each beholder beholds the beheld differently, thus subjectivity isn't derived from either, it's like how life is the balance point between chaos and order, a derivative of two that results in something greater than the sum of its parts.
I have no idea, it's your perspective.
Truth is not biased.
[/QUOTE](You can quote me if you like)
Where do YOU think beauty is Dr. SLudge?the debate was never to define beauty is just asks to defend or challenge the statement that beauty is in the eye of the beholder...
it's true, it is, because different beholders can have different opinions on the same beheld.
What would be the state of mind of an appreciator of beauty? enrapture? Peace? Hauntedness? Coolness? Preoccupation? Immersion? Would any of those light up a common brain area?To continue on what Faux Pas said:
If you assume that feeling something is beautiful is an emotion at least most people feel, and that as an emotion it has or arises from physical manifestations in the brain, you could measure it via electrodes, brain scans ect- then relate the intensity of those manifestations as measured to what the subject describes feeling.
If a significant correlation if found you could measure that for a lot of people for the one thing under the same conditions (lighting, mood of the observer, background colour, temperature, etc.) and then assign it a measure of beauty based on the average of those measurements or something (or just the sum, as a lot of people are more likely to talk about an experience (in this case the experience of appreciating that thing) if they liked it, and then the 'beauty score' takes in account popularity).
I hope that makes sense.
I have such an equation where mathematicians did exactly that. Know which I mean?What about writing down an equation (or expression or process) a majority of mathematicians find beautiful? Wouldn't that be a mathematical expression of beauty, although not general?
Thank you. Thinking of beauty as being a system is not especially pleasing. There's got to be a better way.I think BigApplePi's definition is as close to a general principle as you can get.
To continue on what Faux Pas said:
If you assume that feeling something is beautiful is an emotion at least most people feel, and that as an emotion it has or arises from physical manifestations in the brain, you could measure it via electrodes, brain scans ect- then relate the intensity of those manifestations as measured to what the subject describes feeling.
If a significant correlation if found you could measure that for a lot of people for the one thing under the same conditions (lighting, mood of the observer, background colour, temperature, etc.) and then assign it a measure of beauty based on the average of those measurements or something (or just the sum, as a lot of people are more likely to talk about an experience (in this case the experience of appreciating that thing) if they liked it, and then the 'beauty score' takes in account popularity).
I hope that makes sense.
What about writing down an equation (or expression or process) a majority of mathematicians find beautiful? Wouldn't that be a mathematical expression of beauty, although not general?
I think BigApplePi's definition is as close to a general principle as you can get.
Using the senses of touch and proprioconception for spatial perception (by that I mean perceiving the physical 3D shape of something) will give you sculpture appreciation.
@I'mProbablyanINTP: Can you have false love? Isn't it more a question of confusing love with other emotions, rather than a 'true' and a 'false' kind of love?
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif][/FONT]What would be the state of mind of an appreciator of beauty? enrapture? Peace? Hauntedness? Coolness? Preoccupation? Immersion? Would any of those light up a common brain area?
I have such an equation where mathematicians did exactly that. Know which I mean?
Thinking of beauty as being a system is not especially pleasing. There's got to be a better way.
Can we now say beauty is neither the object nor the person's feeling but rather the person's experience of the object?
Now we return to the OP. We take statistics of people randomly selected from some identifiable large group. We deliver an object and ask them if they experience beauty giving them a rating scale of 1 to 10. We now have a measurement of beauty for this large group. The OP has been answered: We have both objectivity and a measurement. Q.E.D.
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Objection: Suppose a professional art critic comes along and says, "Your judgment is B.S. This so-called art is crap." Or alternatively, "This is a masterpiece and no one recognizes it." Does that blow the objectivity conclusion?[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Answer: If the art critic is articulate and listened to, the group will have learned from the critic how to judge art. That will have been factored into the group's judgment.[/FONT]
I think it'd be so hard to quantify beauty using those brain scans because the things I love one day are the things I hate the next. Maybe my brain scans would reflect passion somewhere? Anything that makes me feel passion is beautiful as wrong as that is.
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Evoking an emotional response is beauty? Don't know, could be.
But I agree with you. And I have no real answer to my rhetorical question, just implying "fake love" or "true love" are all measurements of "love", and before you can measure them you need to define love, and since you can't define love, you can't argue "false" or "true" love. If that makes sense. [/FONT]
Please stop trying to define beauty with a single conclusive definition.
It's subjective, irrational, indefinable, not because there is no applicable definition, instead it's indefinable because there's no single applicable definition, it defies deconstruction because no matter which perspective is taken, you can never describe the entirety.
Escape the tyranny of binary thinking!
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Well we both made long posts. I don't know if I can do justice to yours -- there are so many points. Also Beauty is being discussed on more than one thread so there may be overlap and good points elsewhere. I guess I'll just dive in.[/FONT][FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Long post is long.
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Feelings certainly lie within the eye of the beholder. Man, the social animal shares those feelings. I'm still looking for objective descriptions or sources from which emotions may or may not be derived.… [FONT=Arial, sans-serif]I don't know. ^^' Those words strike me as things that could come alongside the experience of something as beautiful, or as a consequence of it. I don't see them as included in it. 'Feeling beauty' is one type of emotion and those words are all other types, and they can be related or very closely associated but one cannot define the other imho.[/FONT]
Different kinds of beauty categories? That sounds good. Offhand things like "cute" or "pretty" might refer to particular aspects of the whole where not everyone would share that appreciation. The sublime could refer to the more general where the appeal is so broad and universal as to be astonishing.[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Practically-speaking I'd just ask the observer to tell us themselves when they feel something is beautiful. It's a rough-and-ready method, to get something to build on. I wouldn't ask them exactly what they feel when they identify something as beautiful because it'll probably muddle most of them and distract them from the actual vague feeling you want to measure. It'll just scramble the measurements.[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]You can then refine the questions in terms of wording and differences in connotations for different people or groups of people, to ferret out how to refer to the same vague feeling in most people. Ideally we'd get feedback by discussing with people why they answered as they did. Less ideally we'd guess. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]I remember reading somewhere that there where two types of beauty, the pretty and the sublime. The point was made in relation to gender bias, with a list of adjectives for each, with pretty being feminine, small, more often colourful, down-to-earth ect. and sublime being big, transcendent, overwhelming, masculine etc. One could use the dichotomy and test separately for either side of it, with pictures of flowers and the earth from space for eg. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]The pretty stuff could be associated with feelings of 'I like that', 'OMG so CUTE!!!!1!', 'Nice flowers', while the sublime stuff would be more likely to sound like 'Wow' or 'Amazing!', or leave them speechless. You could give a questionnaire to fill in for each object.[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Maybe we'll end up approximating 'beauty' from a pattern of activity as correlated with how people described the experience. 'Sublime' could cause one pattern and 'pretty' another, and we'd have to unknot the effects of memories et al. from them. [/FONT]
Somewhere I saw a list of the top ten most appealing mathematical formulas. e to the pi i = minus one was way at the top. The reason is because it combines three most useful, deep mathematical concepts into one formula and the answer is the astonishingly simple minus one.[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]I'm not sure. Golden ratio ( (1+sqrt5)/2 if memory serves)? E=mc**2? However you make up fractals? [/FONT]
I agree with what your are talking about but am still thinking about it. The topic I think is, "How do we treat experience?"If you want to define the terms used in a language A, you need to make up a new language B (a metalanguage) to define them in, so that there will be no connotations or baggage skewing your definitions, and all that read them can be absolutely sure of what you mean. You can't objectively describe a system while staying inside it, because it mean you have a point of view, a bias of perception, blind spots regarding which part of the system you address and how. You are subjective by definition. Only by standing outside of the system can you take it in in its totality and objectively ('truly') perceive its components and how they relate. By that virtue, you'd need a new language C (a metametalanguage) to describe language B in and so on ad infinitum.
[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]If you try to systematise an emotion, to make a metalanguage to describe it in, you can't use emotions in that metalanguage. But because emotions are an issue that emotionally affect us, our emotions in regards to them will be hurt or annoyed when being ignored when thinking of this important subject. [/FONT]
I think emotions are just a form of feelings. Those feelings are within us and are crude. We are reacting to the outside world which has something we interpret as beauty. Beauty is an abstraction from the outside world.[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]Short version:
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[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]I think beauty perception is an emotion, and we have emotions about it. To analyse emotions objectively you can't use emotions. Emotions don't like being ignored. It's doomed to go against the grain.
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[FONT=Arial, sans-serif]I don't think the way is at fault, the methodology just rankles a bit, through no fault of its own.
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