originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I would say that perforce most of us do look at the results of craftsmanship without seeing the labor put into those results most of the time. We may think we see the labor because we judge what we think it must be by what we think of the quality of the results. But we do not actually see the labor. I would go further and say that our judgment about that labor is really a misunderstood judgment about the quality of the object. That last claim is either begging the question or what Kant would call an analytical argument. I can't prove it except to say that there is an obvious logical difference between value and provenance and that if you think about how you think about these issues, most of the time I think you'll be able to tell the difference.
Isn't this paragraph trying to have it both ways?
At first, other people's judgment is viewed objectively; then, yours is not?
And while I understand your desire to be rational here, it leaves out or lessens the value of what people feel. IMO, logic and rationality go just so far.
Best, Jim
What I am saying about my claim, in calling it analytical, is saying that I am in fact describing the way people do judge these things. My point was that you can disprove what I am saying simply by saying that you don't judge things that way, not that I get to have it both ways.
Of course, like all crafty arguers, I'm going to hedge my bets. So, for instance, John took my challenge and said that he doesn't judge crafted things in the way I describe. That should just make me wrong, but I'm not so easy. I have follow-up questions:
1)When you say you do judge the labor, do you do that by actually seeing the labor and then saying, I saw a lot of it and I like this better? Or do you see things in the object that you take as evidence of labor, specifically the quality with which it was made and say to yourself that you are judging the labor? If you actually do the first, I think you must have some very strange outcomes, but I will then say, as I did, it's possible to do this, but it won't lead to outcomes that I, or numbers of us on this thread, would sign on to generally. If you do the second, then, as I said, you are judging the product and taking yourself to be judging the labor, which is not the same thing.
2)Like you, I of course prefer beautiful useful objects to ugly ones that just work. As I said, nothing stops us from making aesthetic judgments of crafted objects and with crafts that produce art-like objects (carpentry, stone masonry), those judgments can get fuzzy. But if you do make them separately, then my point holds. Think of your judgment of your stereo set. You know doubt do have a sense of whether you like how it looks. But you wouldn't have bought it if it didn't play music the way you wanted it to and you probably wouldn't give up much music playing quality for much how it looks quality. Further, if it could play music with no distinction from a live performance (assuming that is your criterion for playing music quality) and be invisible, and have no how it looks quality at all, you probably would prefer that to having high how it looks quality (assuming you don't think you are buying a work of art) and less than perfect playing music quality. And finally, no matter how you would sort those criteria, I am claiming that the fact that you have them indicates a difference that has to be captured by a definition and that the standard one is between craft and art. I'm open to another one.