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    Watching King Lear produces simultaneous distress at suff... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The representation of tragic suffering in great art routinely produces what Hume calls 'mixed sentiments,' where painful emotion coexists with genuine aesthetic pleasure, falsifying the pleasant-emotion-requires-well-being claim.

    Watching King Lear produces simultaneous distress at suffering and pleasure in artistic excellence, proving emotions can genuinely coexist.

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