Kierkegaard on the value of Art: An Indirect Method of Communication

A. Aumann
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Abstract

Questions about the value of art are nothing new. Lovers of art have been asked to explain its importance since the time of Plato’s Republic. We encounter one common line of defence in Kierkegaard’s writings. Like many 19 century thinkers, including the leading figures of the Idealist and Romantic movements (Speight 2015; Zuckert 2010), Kierkegaard embraced a ‘cognitivist’ picture of the arts. He located art’s value in its ability to teach or educate—to provide us with cognitive benefits. Kierkegaard’s version of cognitivism has a predictable existentialist twist. He is not as interested as Hegel or Schelling in whether art can express general truths about the spirit of the age. Nor is he as concerned as Kant with whether art manages to provide us with concrete representations of abstract ideas. Kierkegaard focuses his attention on art’s ability to teach us about ourselves. Works of art matter to him because they can help us with the project of discovering who we are as individuals. Despite cognitivism’s popularity, it also received pushback in Kierkegaard’s day. Some critics complained that what art accomplishes does not exactly amount to teaching. Others conceded that art might manage to teach in some sense, but they objected that it does not do so as well as philosophy or the sciences. The lessons communicated through art, they claimed, are never as clearcut or well-supported by reasons. The goal of this chapter is to explain how Kierkegaard turns these objections on their heads. I will argue that he does so by making two moves. First, he maintains that works of art do not teach ‘directly’ by telling us truths and offering us evidence. Instead, art educates in an ‘indirect’ fashion by helping us make our own discoveries. Second, the fact that art does not teach in a straightforward manner is not a defect. On the contrary, it is precisely because art teaches indirectly that it teaches better than philosophy and the sciences.
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克尔凯郭尔论艺术的价值:一种间接的交流方式
关于艺术价值的问题并不是什么新鲜事。自柏拉图的《理想国》时代起,艺术爱好者就被要求解释艺术的重要性。在克尔凯郭尔的著作中,我们遇到了一道常见的防线。像许多19世纪的思想家一样,包括理想主义和浪漫主义运动的主要人物(Speight 2015;(Zuckert 2010),克尔凯郭尔接受了一种“认知主义”的艺术图景。他将艺术的价值定位于其教导或教育的能力——为我们提供认知上的益处。克尔凯郭尔的认知主义版本有一个可预见的存在主义扭曲。他不像黑格尔或谢林那样对艺术能否表达关于时代精神的普遍真理感兴趣。他也不像康德那样关心艺术能否为我们提供抽象观念的具体表现。克尔凯郭尔把注意力集中在艺术教导我们认识自己的能力上。艺术作品对他来说很重要,因为它们可以帮助我们发现作为个体的我们是谁。尽管认知主义很受欢迎,但在克尔凯郭尔的时代,它也受到了抵制。一些评论家抱怨说,艺术的成就并不完全等同于教学。另一些人则承认,艺术也许能在某种意义上起到教育的作用,但他们反对说,艺术在这方面不如哲学或科学。他们声称,通过艺术传达的教训从来都不清楚,也没有充分的理由支持。本章的目的是解释克尔凯郭尔是如何推翻这些反对意见的。我认为他是通过两步来实现的。首先,他坚持认为,艺术作品并不是通过告诉我们真相和提供证据来“直接”教导我们。相反,艺术以一种“间接”的方式教育我们,帮助我们自己去发现。其次,艺术不以直截了当的方式教学这一事实并不是一种缺陷。恰恰相反,正因为艺术是间接传授的,所以它比哲学和科学传授得更好。
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