College of the Humanities — Public Lecture The Worlds ... · David Butorac did his B.A. and M.A....
Transcript of College of the Humanities — Public Lecture The Worlds ... · David Butorac did his B.A. and M.A....
College of the Humanities — Public Lecture
"The Worlds Beauty is Decai'd"? Overcoming Ancient Materiality and Modern Aesthetics
Plato's account in Timaeus, following Parmenides & Pythagoras, of the universe as a perfect sphere whose planets and stars each had a musical pitch dominates cosmology for the next 1800 years. The cosmos and all of nature are possessed of some essence, some soul or life, even the planets. In the Consola,on of Philosophy, Lady Philosophy make constant reference to the spheres and how Boethius must turn away from the earth and ascend through the planets towards the heavenly empyrean. This imaginaDve ascent gives Boethius true consolaDon and freedom in the contemplaDon of the unmoved creator of the universe. With the advent of modern cosmology, the universe goes from being laden with beauty and value to mere extension. Descartes observes that the moon is just a rock. With this came radical changes in aestheDcs, philosophy and morality. As John Donne (1572-‐1631) observed, “The worlds beauty is decai’d… Loth to goe up the hill, or labour thus / To goe to heaven, we make heaven come to us” (An anatomy of the world. The first anniversary). David Butorac argues that this change in cosmology, rather than corrupDng the morality or the beauty of the world, both places the human subject more deeply in the world and transforms our experience of it in a posiDve way, as we can witness in baroque art and music.
David Butorac did his B.A. and M.A. at the University of King's College and the Dalhousie Dept. of Classics, Halifax, and his Ph.D. in Philosophy at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium. He lectures in Philosophy at Fatih University, Istanbul. [email protected]
15 October, 5:30-7PM Paterson Hall Room 303