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    An inclination to look beyond an artwork's appearance nee... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Bullot and Reber's appeal to psychological essentialism to explain historical appreciation of artworks is unnecessary.

    An inclination to look beyond an artwork's appearance need not depend on essentialism.

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Bullot and Reber's appeal to psychological essentialism to explain historical ap...The interest or value of a thing may sometimes reside in its relational and cont...Valuing a work on account of its history of making no more implies an essential ...

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    Studies such as these may be thought valuable in their capacity to explain persistent features of aesthetic artefact-making but are unlikely to provide more than a general background against which aesthetic preferences and judgements, debates and disagreements concerning particular artefacts are played out. Saturated blue will be the right colour in a certain context, while muddy brown will be right in another. We cannot say that the presence of saturated blue in a picture is in general a reason

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