goodtaste.txt 5.9 KB

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  1. November 2021(This essay is derived from a talk at the Cambridge Union.)When I was a kid, I'd have said there wasn't. My father told me so.
  2. Some people like some things, and other people like other things,
  3. and who's to say who's right?It seemed so obvious that there was no such thing as good taste
  4. that it was only through indirect evidence that I realized my father
  5. was wrong. And that's what I'm going to give you here: a proof by
  6. reductio ad absurdum. If we start from the premise that there's no
  7. such thing as good taste, we end up with conclusions that are
  8. obviously false, and therefore the premise must be wrong.We'd better start by saying what good taste is. There's a narrow
  9. sense in which it refers to aesthetic judgements and a broader one
  10. in which it refers to preferences of any kind. The strongest proof
  11. would be to show that taste exists in the narrowest sense, so I'm
  12. going to talk about taste in art. You have better taste than me if
  13. the art you like is better than the art I like.If there's no such thing as good taste, then there's no such thing
  14. as good art. Because if there is such a
  15. thing as good art, it's
  16. easy to tell which of two people has better taste. Show them a lot
  17. of works by artists they've never seen before and ask them to
  18. choose the best, and whoever chooses the better art has better
  19. taste.So if you want to discard the concept of good taste, you also have
  20. to discard the concept of good art. And that means you have to
  21. discard the possibility of people being good at making it. Which
  22. means there's no way for artists to be good at their jobs. And not
  23. just visual artists, but anyone who is in any sense an artist. You
  24. can't have good actors, or novelists, or composers, or dancers
  25. either. You can have popular novelists, but not good ones.We don't realize how far we'd have to go if we discarded the concept
  26. of good taste, because we don't even debate the most obvious cases.
  27. But it doesn't just mean we can't say which of two famous painters
  28. is better. It means we can't say that any painter is better than a
  29. randomly chosen eight year old.That was how I realized my father was wrong. I started studying
  30. painting. And it was just like other kinds of work I'd done: you
  31. could do it well, or badly, and if you tried hard, you could get
  32. better at it. And it was obvious that Leonardo and Bellini were
  33. much better at it than me. That gap between us was not imaginary.
  34. They were so good. And if they could be good, then art could be
  35. good, and there was such a thing as good taste after all.Now that I've explained how to show there is such a thing as good
  36. taste, I should also explain why people think there isn't. There
  37. are two reasons. One is that there's always so much disagreement
  38. about taste. Most people's response to art is a tangle of unexamined
  39. impulses. Is the artist famous? Is the subject attractive? Is this
  40. the sort of art they're supposed to like? Is it hanging in a famous
  41. museum, or reproduced in a big, expensive book? In practice most
  42. people's response to art is dominated by such extraneous factors.And the people who do claim to have good taste are so often mistaken.
  43. The paintings admired by the so-called experts in one generation
  44. are often so different from those admired a few generations later.
  45. It's easy to conclude there's nothing real there at all. It's only
  46. when you isolate this force, for example by trying to paint and
  47. comparing your work to Bellini's, that you can see that it does in
  48. fact exist.The other reason people doubt that art can be good is that there
  49. doesn't seem to be any room in the art for this goodness. The
  50. argument goes like this. Imagine several people looking at a work
  51. of art and judging how good it is. If being good art really is a
  52. property of objects, it should be in the object somehow. But it
  53. doesn't seem to be; it seems to be something happening in the heads
  54. of each of the observers. And if they disagree, how do you choose
  55. between them?The solution to this puzzle is to realize that the purpose of art
  56. is to work on its human audience, and humans have a lot in common.
  57. And to the extent the things an object acts upon respond in the
  58. same way, that's arguably what it means for the object to have the
  59. corresponding property. If everything a particle interacts with
  60. behaves as if the particle had a mass of m, then it has a mass of
  61. m. So the distinction between "objective" and "subjective" is not
  62. binary, but a matter of degree, depending on how much the subjects
  63. have in common. Particles interacting with one another are at one
  64. pole, but people interacting with art are not all the way at the
  65. other; their reactions aren't random.Because people's responses to art aren't random, art can be designed
  66. to operate on people, and be good or bad depending on how effectively
  67. it does so. Much as a vaccine can be. If someone were talking about
  68. the ability of a vaccine to confer immunity, it would seem very
  69. frivolous to object that conferring immunity wasn't really a property
  70. of vaccines, because acquiring immunity is something that happens
  71. in the immune system of each individual person. Sure, people's
  72. immune systems vary, and a vaccine that worked on one might not
  73. work on another, but that doesn't make it meaningless to talk about
  74. the effectiveness of a vaccine.The situation with art is messier, of course. You can't measure
  75. effectiveness by simply taking a vote, as you do with vaccines.
  76. You have to imagine the responses of subjects with a deep knowledge
  77. of art, and enough clarity of mind to be able to ignore extraneous
  78. influences like the fame of the artist. And even then you'd still
  79. see some disagreement. People do vary, and judging art is hard,
  80. especially recent art. There is definitely not a total order either
  81. of works or of people's ability to judge them. But there is equally
  82. definitely a partial order of both. So while it's not possible to
  83. have perfect taste, it is possible to have good taste.
  84. Thanks to the Cambridge Union for inviting me, and to Trevor
  85. Blackwell, Jessica Livingston, and Robert Morris for reading drafts
  86. of this.