The decline of interest in the liberal and fine arts is widely
lamented. At issue is why this decline happened and how we might
restore qualitative standards by which to live. Arthur Pontynen
argues that cultural decline is the consequence of a tragically
anti-intellectual academic tradition--and its alternative is the
cosmopolitan pursuit of wisdom and beauty.
Pontynen writes that the liberal and fine arts are justified by
their attempt to understand the material realization of wisdom, of
that which is true and good in reality and life. The current
decline marks a denial that such qualitative aspirations are
realistic. Instead of understanding art as the intellectual pursuit
of ontological perfection, perfection is subjectified as willful
preference or experience. Consequently, the liberal and fine arts
have been displaced by a naturalistic social science and a
relational existentialism. This reduction denies qualitive
thoughts, words, and deeds.
Pontynen establishes that the arts are not obsolete, merely
subjectivist, or limited to a brutal (de)constructivism. He argues
for a renewed idealism that is neither reductionist, trivializing,
or brutalized. Pontynen offers an alternative, global narrative
that is both realistic and idealistic; one that permits us to
distinguish between the trivial, the brutal, and the profound.
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