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    Hume conflates the psychological frequency of association... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Imaginative association is the typical means by which beauty is recognized, even if not strictly necessary in all cases.

    Hume conflates the psychological frequency of association with its aesthetic necessity, undermining the normative force of beauty claims.

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    1 reason for
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    Reasons For

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    Reason for
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    • 1.Hume grounds beauty in custom and habit rather than objective properties, making aesthetic judgments merely descriptive of psychological patterns.
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    • 2.If beauty derives only from repeated association, it lacks normative force—we cannot say one should find something beautiful, only that people do.
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    • 3.Conflating frequency with necessity eliminates the distinction between 'we habitually prefer X' and 'X is genuinely beautiful,' collapsing aesthetics into psychology.
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    Reasons Against

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    • 1.Hume explicitly distinguishes the standard of taste from mere preference, arguing cultivated judges converge on beauty through refined experience, not mere frequency.
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    • 2.Psychological origin does not determine normative force; that beauty emerges from association doesn't prevent it from generating legitimate aesthetic standards.
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    • 3.The charge conflates Hume's causal account of how we form aesthetic judgments with a claim that aesthetics lacks normativity—these are separable issues.
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    Aesthetics1 linked

    Related

    Conflating frequency with necessity eliminates the distinction between 'we habit...Hume explicitly distinguishes the standard of taste from mere preference, arguin...Hume grounds beauty in custom and habit rather than objective properties, making...If beauty derives only from repeated association, it lacks normative force—we ca...
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    Imaginative association is the typical means by which beauty is recognized, even...Psychological origin does not determine normative force; that beauty emerges fro...The charge conflates Hume's causal account of how we form aesthetic judgments wi...

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    2 (1 for, 1 against)
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