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    The experience of fine art, however valuable, cannot subs... — Carmelics
    Home/Aesthetics
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    Supports→The moral potential of art must be governed by a firm recognition of the fundamental principles of morality itself.

    The experience of fine art, however valuable, cannot substitute for a direct grasp of sound principles of morality and politics.

    AestheticsVirtue Ethics
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    Art has moral potential that can benefit sound morality and politics.The moral potential of art must be governed by a firm recognition of the fundame...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    The moral potential of art must be governed by a firm recognition of t...82%Sulzer holds that art's moral potential must be subordinate to direct ...80%An independent grasp of and commitment to fundamental moral principles...79%Works of art enliven our abstract knowledge of moral precepts.78%

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    For this reason, the moral potential of art must be governed by a firm recognition of the fundamental principles of morality itself (ibid., p. 78). Sulzer does not make the mistake of thinking that the experience of fine art, valuable as it can be for sound morality and politics, can substitute for a direct grasp of sound principles of morality and politics. Although his emphasis on the moral potential of the heightened sensitivity (Empfindlichkeit) that can be developed through aesthetic educat

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