哲学杂志철학 학술지哲学のジャーナルEast Asian
Journal of
Philosophy

Home > Journal > Journal Issue > Journal article

Publication details

Year: 2023

Pages: 29-44

Series: East Asian Journal of Philosophy

Full citation:

Roberta Dreon, "On the Meanings and Implications of Joseph Margolis' Definition of Art", East Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (2), 2023, pp. 29-44.

Abstract

This paper develops an inquiry into the meanings and implications of Joseph Margolis’ definition of artworks as physically embodied and culturally emergent entities. It starts from the pars destruens of his theory, by comparing two different texts criticizing Morris Weitz’ denial of the possibility to define art. While in an early essay Margolis is ready to accept a constructivistic conception of necessary and sufficient conditions, six decades later he seems to have dropped the attempt to maintain a deflationary version of enabling conditions in view of a more coherent form of contingentism and pluralism. Secondly, the paper focuses on the “generic” character of Margolis’ definition, namely its being too inclusive, insofar as it fits any kind of cultural entity. The author suggests that the first implication of Margolis’ “generic” definition is the idea of continuity between artworks and the things and events of the cultural world. A second implication is that according to Margolis differences between artworks and other things can only be traced a posteriori, by looking at collective practices and at habitual uses of the term. Finally, the author argues that Margolis’ radically historicist and contextualized approach to the arts should be integrated through a coherent historicizing and contextualizing of the very issue of the definition of art. A similar step could have strengthened his transition to a more inclusive philosophy of culture and philosophical anthropology.

Publication details

Year: 2023

Pages: 29-44

Series: East Asian Journal of Philosophy

Full citation:

Roberta Dreon, "On the Meanings and Implications of Joseph Margolis' Definition of Art", East Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (2), 2023, pp. 29-44.