Hegel Introduction To Aesthetics Analysis

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In Introduction to Aesthetics, G.W.F. Hegel’s opening paragraphs describe the spacious realm of the beautiful, the relationship of beauty in both nature and art, and the limitation and defense of aesthetics. Hegel addresses that the proper way to express the meaning of aesthetics is to refer to it as Philosophy of Fine Art, however, once adopting this expression humans, “exclude the beauty of nature” (Hegel). As humans, it has become a way of life to use our senses to help describe the beauty of nature, animals and other people in our world. According to Hegel, “beauty of art is higher than nature” (Hegel) and it is the art that is created by the spirit that stands above that of nature. Nature is an incomplete substance and the, “realms of nature have not been classified and examined from the point of view of beauty” (Hegel). Therefore, there is a difference between the beauty of nature and …show more content…

The use of art is key to understanding the philosophy and religion of different nations and brings out intellectual reflection. It seems like Hegel is trying to say that through art that expresses intellectual reflection that it allows the spirit to heal. Hegel expresses the external world and inner world of sense and the power art has on the Greeks and even the Christian view. He comes to the point that art is now a thing of the past. Now art has, “lost genuine truth and life, and has rather been transferred into our ideas instead of maintaining its earlier necessity in reality and occupying its higher place” (Hegel). There might be some correlation between art 500 years ago and art today. Art can used as a form of expression of intellectual thought as well as a form of entertainment. Hegel says that for today, art is a greater need and for knowing philosophically what art

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