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    Hume notes that observers seldom rest with mere form-base... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Imaginative association is the typical means by which beauty is recognized, even if not strictly necessary in all cases.

    Hume notes that observers seldom rest with mere form-based approbation.

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    Aesthetics

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    Cases where pleasing form alone suffices for approbation are a very small class.Imaginative association is the typical means by which beauty is recognized, even...

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    Hume recognizes a very small class of cases for which imaginative association is not needed to recognize beauty. In these cases, initial impressions of the mere “form” of a material object generate approbation (T, 364). Such cases are more typical of natural beauty than art (EPM, 173). So imagination is not always necessary for discovering beauty. Pleasing form is sometimes sufficient. However, “’tis seldom we rest there” (T, 363).

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