Title of article :
Landscape and the philosophy of aesthetics: is landscape quality inherent in the landscape or in the eye of the beholder?
Author/Authors :
Andrew Lothian، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages :
22
From page :
177
To page :
198
Abstract :
The paper proposes that landscape quality assessment may be approached on the basis of two contrasting paradigms, one which regards quality as inherent in the physical landscape, and the other which regards quality as a product of the mind – eye of the beholder. These are termed, respectively, the objectivist and subjectivist paradigms. These paradigms underlie the surveys of the physical landscape and studies of observer preferences. Examination of these paradigms through the approaches taken by philosophers from Plato to modern times demonstrates the ubiquity of the paradigms in underlying human perception of landscape. Until recent centuries, the objectivist paradigm provided philosophers with the basis for understanding beauty, including landscape beauty. However, the philosophers Locke, Hume, Burke and particularly Immanuel Kant identified beauty as lying in the eyes of the beholder rather than in the object. The parallels between Kantʹs aesthetic philosophy and contemporary theories of landscape quality based on an evolutionary perspective are examined. Most philosophers over recent centuries have adopted the subjectivist view of aesthetics. The paper concludes by proposing that only the subjectivist model should be used in research of landscape quality.
Keywords :
Philosophy of aesthetics , Kant , Landscape theory , Landscape perception paradigms
Journal title :
Landscape and Urban Planning
Serial Year :
1999
Journal title :
Landscape and Urban Planning
Record number :
746800
Link To Document :
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