ࡱ> ;<na;`B;;˃ PNG  IHDRX<B4sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<PLTE33f3ff3PP̙f3fff333f33f333f33f333f333f333ff333ff3ff3f̙3f̙f3f3f3ff33f3f33f33ff33ff33fff̙f333tRNS@f cmPPJCmp0712g9IDATx}kwȒڽ=uے%B{U(16#" 3CR$E Ȭ]K1Dܦ)NM]wlƧ]&64 ~t0a\o~i?Gӭyhm'MLa]um .V6]ǩ>/`6ڵio-=p[>tB .qL"~ojfׂzi)}Χ=~>‡_q?ys{yRJ]tN//'罽l?=ϓ/×߿?`O;hkz =s>rܦ)|a˗x`_s?~^mv][a!9]n17DZmqoci O_/__/_=|1}^ @a+L@]gu!g{E|9}9 tԙ' xyq2xlprWc{d,P,; ߇_ ?qўw_|&{T17\rO_&·bbq&27c]04s35g,˶#hyZa|.PnM44MX5(A 3+ii0*a}ZC s6xN0Vͻ]+cPpJ^Xӡ3/ Sy/ Wϟdzׯvk,nw$#7l?xN8mٴe,aˠΚ~ǂ 5U2k@>>|؜@{ kf2"=Yxɇs2dxV3:j[Lq<ě1,CX{eAˮdoloA8+CUζd8YT4:/{O`==#}<aBovŭǧO_^>+C!l_N(b,G>۝=ʾXycXae='g,Ba(en%raq͢!$? I  8O!0vHdkD#iʘST#Ƙ 3$a>2 +F-c v+o3mtMC.@Su@Q`%{cQ\>~i,i=cy6Xr!=BY2,fx|_p|748_J:d2+&1oX/2Hx/ `BBξ8p-Jg;%dX8Y$,@k'G^Rke-q>6? (>>4qV0c DTT_V&Z@A͎AY@Vs2.V캨[4eȌ@eYT`-&,C!VfUk>+er`V!G$;SZfCƲ#`xt (;!~~/7G'bW~d[/P:T+Iv?/GCgX<.gJVa D$9U !aB ~Z0Xh3#k2\ wFPRp0k+0LbN8ktdgrؕ)%Vhm02u% 7FpF428#υ |thgOqX"f=ak~,@k\*bfkg7y[`Mz[2Ͷ@C ؚrcq+SxT/^^pL& qVq<;eGC0Y;p6bY1hw#ʬQeS LBHw6"~! 큪'&v !xbpE$<ЎY9zKAYWG(: )@2AǙD%EK]23@0A,1(w;'#1YaWw")m] L)" PZĄMaeQȈvю: +0mYP(3:QV ,hۅ`J ZЊ]@ޗYLt/R^FmeigUcjeȗLn/Ҟg8/~Y@X%zFY~dNO?l_xRG4ҁ ZH؉KZ*G"EhK(h+\ La])9L,4Pbv!ɧ@qBMVs$lvgy'!˖p*,> < R.>ҮkO!3 -۳ʯB %.!515,1> #4Yaa2bL;S$-ՂV$!ap,.Bd(TA ˂-IP]j¢V  q8ar^wد)8d>ەIߦ%Z7!Zz- ]KvfGblq)tD4Oʞu{3dbV 0|va 4P,z22d=1踕פ Qǎ"dc(!h1@7Nf%daGwrNw.@Uuo S$<)l'Beo 3z 8&w }j !H5W!Xv&[hfzH7dH֌"c@c:vZG (!\Ԝs萑)-Z8mYl5m IV8Z|e8-&@eY{I`۷$(54 U *%,>^>=ݑO_ T}ʐ2~}Qۆ#)yP, N㱡T; pwVV4jA P3Ʋ\cP[GTݷ QPߴˉHP5+l`T - 9SR˿*cim%c wmtXELD$Z2L߽$jqp>_"пAtxi #4Eir\ž 1kymiW~jh +I!Ϣ2FhqVEO'G :z 円@FB }O8BVO?(®4Yx"ͦNd>% !Uxt*;FU23 e1XaB=!Ryp,!i{& ~`trHEʇ@.DX'7Zg)'(9eXby Ŗ&`Vj눬X/\H;ʡ1jl!-bhB'˦LR^aasY0(Nΰ1\o{EDl`P mt׺†P_>$Oi8YGXl"b 07b1H5"g2!2R2gֽ,DRT3 ?S؋;8!B*,4dzIb@5:Z΄ɠ^4y  )ɫ'3\Y&JaogMpĠTF&ITKWDU*ZNpn2~C~w "턝0PPu v};e̱rY2Y5B@! s >Zk Rk0ckKF<'؎ DV"kG=K0⫕jj/egHYbD05*KSk'!P2 2<N#l5v@jᖠOe{G8J f9}8xV'k++F!#3~UxBQŴ_ee%$dcp$Si.副 (2zRF[GZϴ0¹#pyap&:\ƞz!C8L?'@u D35>: k3 1ޢ7+ŁqhP0G(BU\dW"GAnșt$J'Wr bŎtI f:  @];a,a}\q< ܜ&xx}b!C6IIA˺ .a3 P/=dl'Ϸ`F@ U nK˽`Sd;`+ 4C/ޠϡ֥YbՃ4RbG)z#ڍ #_ '0VYDR.[HRaQ/"K~OH DU {\IQoߑC\x#Ri?X#8<[;)^]rD"ҊmвC֏*PYn*JFVCh'K]d,Tu#aH7-\*& 朴վ`)?kN=6Gب$]:2KKB(X+/Q=medJ8]dRl3J?KX=feTUP(MZIU&Be1H%*ϕoOހt!8g F>+=2)dFQ\Զy*O|ȇFHd},-r)aC`z"%DT Ooi6([r0hW Kg5:c:{YJ䀫'gQQ2SljkG 6m޶~`XTR_G DKL0Vlo|4 MK 2\=W+ sr\z:]NW}.?w`d3%m o7j/&2Zc-K!#J|ъ, T SO /ѹ"M*HYBY1NTTA%]nl=ղdx \0$5)i.3x?_dAYSSAvƫ) h%Z(ʂ*,h`ߥaGjONf)I]%Sn{COڈKJNYW#71p/ 2Nu^(FkzY (x+$eBHX۴i͗'7APY2߁jaJ^T0+'ɤx1~nG*;:NƈB@≃;@.xgb*dՂR:I13nUY`󑕖(T\Tc + *AnܶI&v7wqlEej$ȏ*TөEV4+ jlEY4H]fm`])2?蘆E[56"~`cetGW JB# >ufmԱڨQv )w""r_q{I-|hM #[AU"m]~bd GyXL އ"@LV ".bJ?ﮕ6L&{4%*( }ȫhM%fA#'Od'jGB LLR3yQÈ!kU3#CI&3U,q0Y؟ q1Φz' JaLRulrX<']!]Wynư}Y*d$U(WBJCRJF[`ڼ)UkZyaY4JAUhIcC: Z!uנYv溅Igo@:D)A2~ݹzwxck=#+}//c݉@f֐aQCV0O: UY&Fc5*3 ?g_|F`v}RJQr c  ]$qBYD\7˄i]BdʑUb,*nF[+ Ejoopy L;9]6haZk~ӝ[^)#'GҘ@RQS[Qq؎Rd$eQd:U!U^M E"lzy9UUVr=Uni1D*(^= Ғ"\e-F^ey>8,ǚxTmMlw oU ]Yߗׅc-4Z䦎TN y|䐲OhцO? O;;LEɔ ޒ W V192 kEed#-=(Yd<ScܥWW6_V_].m#-$:m'?HPatLX5$nNozx?cuEҒ"ۗ2aCMwnrHoHMPkmum#baZ\5ʱ0"6 A wuq@sl6o0Xg.N?h" KlЇwD ӛ'%Z ϩTNW-%  q`FXgUO-I<(Ȱ Mg/ &.IgrW"okqX,)I7u06.WjuX0߮V{(YZN|o\a޽\X+aCU!Em:UϾ饭`8ՏX#"pZʩS{QӯЈ#WZ/b5ҎnOwH#a,C^%JW D4J/@=ِçԊ!F UW ,xkTYTZr< Z^ȅ #L/KQQgϐ>- =vJ)ÂG0 .ۢ IZ^5j%8"ow ] krdŵ'b ;GVG"txl K3&Dӵrjv0-2G!u-$IbݛRڕ~V0JuUWAPO;𢶭"X gP_ tMTz)r$V$NÒ?P;\/X1 B.W'v,VQ_ӿ2Gr YHޛ欼E-a& ɦpۊv{k• 1MmܖĪ*t,չDe>"DHthy;N-n68:dF|FŠV!E%QGQP>v7XW v xX^Rِ%,Z31Å p˾L?NXoX aa(O+>J\3:R1U5T{m3U;M!&uzM\|Po65 kY̌Ik֫n}iRE._5pEZ ; E4ƒVwPAjZV\[lQj1Z~4I3]'%1xhCp2&U8f&Dt*3,o8k@%W5mps%k߷i rM Xq 7~htGϠCq f y<N9MI5K~^+2;xiF.@Ճ6B\_`_ H 91ĦAvڇ8UiIŵ{ƍ5+#vƯ'MMY"eF"Pk ܑ?v2 w\K1A7@fM߿IM H<{)˙2dgWùʶYһNWaiʠ_7_ءuQ)_D[mP9:,m<}c}4 ?u0r^zgDP[IF_=Պ!6M CIG smCJV>-V¡e}CQ:t#M^|>kV )8λ#zW~7[;|) :諶TA\,a Y}SLJcRa;r\$ZTk6EaW!'NYo4ɾx 5hC0x럧7ZJFoqiiN`55;ƒƊgPy]Denx`jm&]9OӭQ07YcMWqRT[Gw rT|TTP\&Dwh_`{IIJN XFVaiRWE?RGWZ1X+,j:L23fQ4@HW-ezzܫ\3D:>BYl)O)o @Z?FH8z,D? $vPcJlv;s/Vy2@ʽu?i)鍲OU~8W vLaQTu[s1bTTNyL"cε6jSCv |{*/ C|:.1w4C^mV?\+΂*N[. 28oA [ncIiXm\z{2VsF ! nC4i"5Sir{'e"=7i;uUmAdWG1\+ӹ"zA04dZo.bZ)j,2H$CE]z\h3n4]Tc8)2?<\!N߼EK{MNֻHIjY:)< LU~M6}Z+VO!n <*k\wVN`GHcx ow}Bx#:ol)‚Nn3,Q\N3 tD+:̱2V#flpNBܜTӾ ʶpy0o+66v, dHACt%WGٯZ #f)^ʩc(zi(xͅu~Z{CU|vĝ] G~ ?Nuwpn:h,i-8-)a鈩P-i#$Kil7iI;5co'[Jo߹ߕ;S]_Zc4Lgo[&$>b: C/%yꞭg_AoY "UsN^VNYWH{pظ )~:iW7(. V ͬooɛ& ≔V pʏbmQUG- @gpUmgEx{gVN+nN|0 <3Xmq~:eNeMTY$dDŽfUi0n^ 5'eLтb*j'і5>-3"6K eUf+"∑NBjJԅ.ƺfvqh@cz[†?AaiI Kތwݧv g__VONV .kCmzwHI#nPwQy5Vm=^)7ژ[-]|zz?c.Oxv"fs=&W.@c0H#p3&+Roۙ!i5'K? i$d-RpC _fY▕u{4ws:b&8lGo/x6magSˇ#k3Gj} :]&/RJ>L>!@VXG.*v`oozpLYj8߅u'$9>sal3z۽d,>טhk,IENDB`n"3M,E?;fPNG  IHDRX<B4sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<PLTEffff3f333f3f̙̙333333333333333ff33f3f3f333f̙̙̙f33f33333̙3f333f333uhAtRNSv cmPPJCmp0712g1IDATx} 8$(Y*6k<.;2"3APUݻ'E"#`U9Plq cCjƸ8\%]#\<즛bOۋ_?ׇ/_~ ^Xp> )1]d#+7H*ϑ7{4߮e]1*x=E?/ϼ-?ϲ"~>]./^x{..O"m{ocss3?0='ڲ,_>t>㤟g6$R>ˎE;~Yjv954]+NuM`"olͥrSԆʛ'r/5'u~|˿w$_~"Ґi4h0`ՕR^&U^5u5}kr`~" "%`j k۫ӷ >^4[^/4"\0|B7osR3qdّ5 e ` 8lA~nEЄG$|)Яy}~|,z^N/ys]G LW`KzgAקh=2YzHt)˚p%uv=wz`SH;-"@"T g}+/W#,TC&M* Q~(]Vpd? JU+5dIoMzطJXCzpF[ cIISR i|=_D$}nzRd\7/&ۏ W@Mn VV%OB_d,կ/~y\/OӪ g=^)TfPI#,Zc}H_\IY,'9pZ~][Ϥgő2X)NI eur5rTiCG,yH(ry K |0EM~`{"\0 0Nqu*VHY ;$Wi% ԯ)- " ՀM~~ 4LR/)GkZ%)rҐH3tRZ*b]?]^.`+W$c,PK~6=Y]IN/<&=0eV&Xep$'vŬDH\bX9[2ʳ|F{8Xacl:0K֢*+ ƞ X#E\%FO.QzyQ񊚼W Yg5:Rt8@luUAY(J76(iANXBaZ΂?(6|1 P O" cfȖb!1Ĝ<IECՌX(l%a^)A Px;la 7Qc OO?Pep57p{^-EP!c}!@s AߌX )fʬHq+qQRL;5|ߔo8#Ba  ]DC * :95%0TMB~T.Dr! ||x!c ’]~ 3d\!(@i;a`aQ+",(1{9aUE=!:2TO@IҒ$ij],kY ~@-ʑ Ñ9J$DRUs^2" +둸ݸI2<P1$0x^A,Oϊ.>`d 0) {"i_ˆ ;W €VXM@KK1|߁.~}d&dtT(X ĜAPB] !5@cSei\X)p6!bWˀM %80$߶J($ W2xQXm=4K[l"c*YH @-.D/jP Wp%6IӾf"1 $6d<0YЌwF-Jb{*M,W BYmЂǡY@A,N 0-h^¡j^E"^ *A&`ZrApf+FhQG($XzY5G}Ak&a6Aw%4]4'ՃT|*%e-2!#KP,ߍm(< ) %^jfĕ +"GY @Bk&eڰ 0Th9)+KP+P[gQ|" ,lUauApg:Qƨ9ZuY*bK.rxRKcYYrދѹ,B$_K(H'ybϠ%~ !4 Eƚ`'O , lCYOH"_ղ;R.ᢃB0O<$GрKۘ,BȗrMH\*U mz@0 $ q .S$u\>"M 2[Y T6p,)[폀4(̪U_EO4lZODӫ '=8y~vLH#tGԣ\hif+ףue޴(!U7 _WjsszZN${n(獔QEo/lSd-6r0/jh##a o2ʒtjm.o "$my/Ybf);,JIyg〰-$B[Qb0&d$$X$Iv{i,G5ZB3E@~ !M)K Cs0z :w"W~W]yjʊ=\$@RAYU6 M+^^#dI@\"U;z0GeAڪ&ST( Vv9d 5P[ Fa D,)W@ğPj(.bL#,>F D"%ʔ}m|Pɼ,=:i=MN^ NlI>ʈ`)s|l*Y(+4Ȋ A,3qY9ɖ+@,6$U*$;+( &2[>@OJUgu!t#c;>M13v*$c!LT t{e<([J8@*& i!Fq E2e<% ̦'#'}U2 𷠰"咻iF k`N'E!=l&BIЄ#`/R&xߢjdhJKJ&Rw #  RxwW6$d`fy,\wFȈW /9dVpq5š2-ASZ jѠ֐"`NAf[ P"QRH4eq<#0 cPW Ks *ÍY߰|cS[PEq^UΨ='_R( 5+Y<ųC H ,E#F(AOC{jpӏ s$R&%­Ժe2 $C!`HYy\+.Wvk|L"5؂ w#8Ter ]N.@7Kj55(Jf?RbL Y$'gSyì亙nA1s myCnLj'ki݆0E$ۇcnV48ʦPS|yѦC7P]#L޲9jFi3(6'iF] 9Bda)BHL}ݜ./ >c4xm0Y<' Y-+l.qS]]?g”)01"ቴ#plj)!!C'5YwaBnژYp5g #) U v&I.܈D̺d(rJ>3@"ИU0kM?p^!ƠDsczqGULS6La`րȡF(:Y&HIzS?2J"c-T:oژA%C Dt :ߨ1U"Stng!'B-a(ӤqlCBڛuff7 f޿GBkt`-U`Ш^qjFEmjm|nX"8c,ʠa8v6Xш)wл1S:o']ʅ|jXLASGmF%( cX S _ZR Hp9Em^$7R-ҚT6>-%9 ͝@43 ҪLD!R"JF<㝲_m%y҉r6a$-t.F<-Xx\tƉ**6BbH&=qU"Uo-TwԗA39J˨4& ,TJ:7 nnvӛ ^$mrs˿fH"*_ ɝKc+`7 +=[Oj TTA^a.0Ѭ-2JPvM% |/cu;+<#e`r-+Lף@-ԱNOYckt]26crlϤNUѝ62>} WP*[9K?b5M:xN@l /s̻X3S Hm|21*(f 1V'QS"ߌBmS[JIݩ >N}/P݂ AκvV$O;QpWx"?$QVYˀko;=\1;F;]F0YX:Y-750HvNnثpm2ڢǦStΖZu'$@k/研VWr6踇#Pˢ0 ʣC!A? c-]+ ]oYy Qff!z"єRR٘JMuH׸0eV>>F570S׮ޭ;'%o+)Cϸ @Vp9_=d  u6edm9gZlnrUt98c1tK!tb sS‚L*(1ynV  =anqN]%.Ypvlovw~0ݕ(MqnФiBT (QW0Iխwa3|!җ՗e4"Ga%E ՚ͳiL)[޹ k['nVR75$, d u%cAZgu5sمQs}A U0naԒ0_geo3ľt6lP"wx3.5"/h)Lh'X} Y}YCdf> u:>(Ɩ>1RݞaY>[*oDal0]bhGE$((0k?pzC%_N3 Q?rزoڷvuF.wEȝeSpzX.5U%vOUB^|?J~owS-f re+c-N!_vV'\#!Wq}Q0V SF TuM0Xg\b( *c*%8#oKp"TCjrކL ؁WTh2H@6*M5VeBe /qa_l*`"IU0 Pb%Fk~̓a#=vGB,6"p ,Qh64u]-dO4\kFT2)kExNฮ+g,;4BARu XvHMCFjD4&b 7b+& ._X&>A txSP%%Xu為LJ:=P1\O(YIVf Pkaa:]|*6h(H^1")tjS{dHq1x&4IS40ޒbF+Tp}"1Mƫ"RP#nQW6 РuOX(F dfn`Epy P;àiU̗2b;TQL{g<ΪIBwrW{c.AH1|oI6TCwOYA=Ce뢇oQ=)9y}'NW4o7Bc,,&sPkF}'6XA^k#)C]x#MM>pU?A[ JY%`ZȭʦY_O-yVNqTE1(1} mbsmUlea>{6pGJqPvUߓ0DF=NRa1P/NW#&*U;QAYNNt5ܲ#khJqx(iu^5Ronz kأ!PrBMdP,dڱj`Ŭ-^7it@=uҕaB.tοVTU54lI-\7 3T.M=,Ym 5Db4@Y6b`"OcKm\3d{BVI[bZ3* e烱Z|+R+z hY8KR y(ѽQ>vÌ%R;+Y3UؖqX L@:E:l'l_t:͟v]Kj:BMԬ'HL- 4(Hcp"F<;+G4q.l( Mj0ߔP5 K۹u*;:E?fV82K1T80$Y)1{XXTyD~?ϧ' Rb%eSElej=HnZ ;,#Nddve-d5Y&6CT(SL,kPsxJwu$ =挲HXAZԀqKI0-!x4hŐ \vnp# J`-{H/τmos'MH'UP5FYA5&g+8SEŰ5iiLSʰI~(T9eUQlL&hXK?TRB 6FS:FV`Vi9l%X[4dK $1sZPM|e lygD^PUPg J_g'^{&> >_g96fT JT;cᵍMƷ0ͥwpJ@f^VVHYU;m"V(F \ƔI*wW,tGZh#&wC?5:|CߪکR$J }ڱʞ/`tg@s,fЇ < )* U|o '٘lw (k~;Ai*R0#>ثѸd44-%ז+YTNKP.[ @R0]{HE.ԁ)c'aVzKe:kǙcXl'ᯆ}W[œA-=\ #HLKil4~+V;UT S2X֒Tß!$]u:Z_jNs}|͂wi.¶9_:Fq|_hT.ƆLK5zB;:1dc9wűϥu4ڱ5ƆaϘwPN捽& RJ?cZ@S-s^ !?^`ҎbދÈ^eiaqkCn]Ss܁WcpRiVRgѕ}YВb9ɒ^"N+8 p osYCzVZ?}8{aF[TqnФ:ey:0GP[]Oi! rZkIv~8=뢭lmv4[r6yJOZot JWU"]UnbS'G ϿgjW,])̸-]l嗽TqDGR{Ԇrf= k}3> di]&2?u@췺TPrd>`09K=\v|`ƐkVbs1++bW9=NAB WIHg|;MaUosgбV;+t}Mdxw[Z"af%j ho'Oe+sxލJGJhZ:S}Bbmq67`d`լ+wѻx:6CK=Ys2 ~enyjߐNJX$m2~L-'>>OQ;]%#_KA>Xǜs7 Nh( ^ /,Gam 9#wh{oL-n*?]M6:; C$,t/9{pkvRˍ6< m~dmHe@URf7y t:ڞ o]"4*r2&J^#F4>jըrnk_WpyGWHa.ʽdЍGŻ?GK3O9+Yջ[ʥh3_s9dϽZ_ދDn]]uFJh}[$&ҋSP\xNbEc#6M.e\hX~ܤt-5?Oj32&AOL O`]r>Y6"Q]NVuK,w[G 5l[o,ȱaGTXk 0C<}]Rb9׎&Uo- 3iI *6ʌxǝt+wB?~>c*l%}o~n].;PͩqSCI^{ Z_[翹 q^un{:Yn4cTK2EoꇾH@,:^enz?H59H7޲D-~?ǽ}$ >Y#9D'p81;-$"<,_/G=߹#>MDveݖ} b LT9A0?ytG dIENDB`n ە/+h;K_PNG  IHDR, 9!sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<fPLTEf3333ff3fff33f3333333f3f3fff33̙33̙3f̙f3ff3f33333F p+tRNS'4 5 cmPPJCmp0712|4IDATH E#ZSkTdTc/@:CDi/G&HHw˫ ZmUս>@ b1ȑc1^~{~~w1~DI8DXoc}$)E$UU;{G >3cE)̙ͩ,g0@ݬy:㸐/yz'''P8W_%5YUUkt9zHvH:oJtt Xgn]zZ=^PU>>??O3sOFNIsZ\x21n0]LvM On{NSU[mUG+;okVV$H@o"" ì/v+CҬ$5F q0"Sd;G&I}e⒈a~ɉo/mmH wF;KjwEYcqۡLRU%ޭi".eXN"+UH_M2efyMjSR2[>gd=s],3;a:du먉wkrbc*Ih~|Bȑ9e]9d\*RBR9s׹$sued7fyj+g 5]U'QaEުfVȐnm 2xf?_f]E({3p9`sN|Eie\IP`T5 $G&djdsN͔}Ձ@3n=WXIݚ&Z39;'U@YKRzWL1O" hM:L]7ku5ެK]Rn~ 9UV AJ4 (/MSJ)=+:go b=2#Z&ȐgLM x9O*rN7U$nj!63I$M?wO>'o!$DIENDB`F#(];軞DҧJFIF  }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzw!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzC   (1#%(:3=<9387@H\N@DWE78PmQW_bghg>Mqypdx\egcC//cB8Bcccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc ?B ( (Ҁ'yYB=O4Iq^}wO??'_"|P@>dU$.GzmxwIPIk#q,hj]0284$ъm4g,S"Y> 2ڼ#F'g{̥J]EdRsր,α_Zh(oNPe3nTkcAeg]:#ۚyXq qҀ+NXj1{Yr<(ē\[Z'VU t#mnܬ*f8%m;*eh*>q^}wO??'_"|P@H&<Þq@{X }nM嫍6& XyR } 7}mw8@m$ ^I2Vq4z(IGb"ė)"'p=P8@h糼Q!9=CMG;=?(A P/T")CstV^+X|q`0cdk1@mbSjlԫ>UuaހP8Ȅ$0*@?ѿ4q>ߧO ei-V$l-JW H*ПPs@zꮫ׸PqI0 X_sĴ d ,8F5X;~RIhBpp@ͷa yC7L4  :B\Oz/f]aVar\]rs4Oow_JeYYNh>tPO6&Q@>q^}wO??'_"|Pe %i'eP8<q:LW =y'@-'̪lK1 iEnI(~\{P ǟ>X)<8̌y9 t T)@Zs$g>f\}hCʇ*=sgn;vh(44X[G' 1;P_F+o +?Oq8B;Hַݜ؊ch9; Ch2nX uǷa(f}8s@Hڀ84b3Ug94Ͱ@{ 殡$⊲UA&p=x4jTqKOӊrTexP<=2K1(s@?ѿ4q>ߧO ?s1sڸtu3kuئ_-$'㷱((b] Qڀ$ҊyRCd3v9 &BYT19Q4#n6jQ^ZLgjր"' 8Ҁ3MѴAQzP YK\@N~( ۴# : K"Zֈ<"9OP40pGu bFҾߧ~>D(#hז2HNG\rC[Ā>wxz}Ҁ͌YXz:5b\//ˌt3ho%E\ iMgp@_Ȏ\iFA,Po{LM0R9)-nnfP @]޻ʟ#ǐCu7확.#BqqKx6@1iX@QnlU8{P+R*=zPٛMi?('?4F+o +?Oq8B:\"_sH  kbyOC: {|d$S=#@:lL!mPGx ןt7P$\q"i(!&p0d_rHq s}(ɫj 8̌@&hT|Ҁ9 p8繠FN(tN,0Z.IISwO}[#<TvgbrOS@Ȫz䱷1`zOpWaGA@/?ѿ4q>ߧO 4$`"#=H# 7Ibh+ hJBݜߍt?`Fyq^}wO??'_"|PPs@ ֓2Z.0J<%{_@xjW1n~tҀ=Ixf?@cPy#NbWQwZ3@Hi #  >a|A]&XɷP)Ăc@vci 8h/.Ti\/$~mi s?g(c#z7??'p8}|!@v Vvm.n\Z4Ahͷ?)j쁊`^e@s2@ +U:t01q^}wO??'_"|P@tiXGLdf=sGl`l>0T",BPS$*ր-G q. x*$2*IE߅s+=%c@8S) R2##4Yjihϛ8(:Q rۤ\gt;stZy%|1CJ~?N>D \\Oali G=pNsP-Ԣf%'#@n 6Iw C- qۜ Ĺ]mV9qq+=KO7fcb X i#s@IE#^h?vxS뎴c,I]ʼ@ =xWWp8]q'ȅP6|<&@h9P۷@wehZPIr:t Y0`'ZOO"JP^D`,Wp*lq ]w]ffTnؠWVKe)/]14\1]=m&HepI@mr=@%9E y<dz)R@(c#z7??'p8}|!@Cƞh:'?@!0e{,"_-Ǧ(, ,ͱ#\Pc^G1՘ɜ@ xr >y *w4DL581֧/5ӷv5(o(e2FTڀ4#ɪ^F^ I8hާ*I c@#ԨߺR$>Qh*VOA((WWp8]r(2}OF(<@ @%GvU?LP} #@Tvm V&QF1mPD ('R8;993ܲ`}N#cvtF̥\ʹ ,67t hA ! YJI >q^}wO??' xD &>gڀ%IPr1@ȏj12l'bqҀ"XIe(5O#^ߧ{D  ^""gScouehоI,xcڀ9$@ii"HI6ϷLY\Z4fd=2TXu u1]'on?%i܁$͹8$qs zEPί#|C-Ҁ9Yfk 4R3o sQ@%FGp@h (WWp8]rbGjA#?3Di#րSJ s@iMc{ ƒ7mߑ^U '9x(hVö 6yD,g Tƀ<[mʬIO^1A P@c>P@v bFҾߧ~٠F ϱqtHJV _JFIFC     "" $(4,$&1'-=-157:::#+?D?8C49:7C 7%%77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777G"?!1AQa"qB$23%CRbrs!!1"2AQq ?bQEMrKB`䓀+-!ӣY pqOiK թ^򎥹Dq']Wn'@`<s mk<0*+c%WU_tQSExTTiuY-Z;kY`F+<X ad_vVoҰl6<rF7]wR K#o66ׅ7w+&d;\ݤ3}?np'#o33ב]R8\Z=/C[{+89 E{W1æ}SO4fF7ı:`} Tg"+&N3Z(_[S! ~}k[&f/GOwwaz]K1iM.fYb`8?U3hS+\6At܀w'?/ڦsݸNWOгyLh7;p1VvRin|YO[MFDaChPĜ#-{7VGֵ92Kʭ`q䑁[ !Z)ĐOpȒmfI;?`) xo旗)ߑeETSQS@Ywr"K1=M+md閚YI n! *nXO}:]+^,d4-Q=zTV~gյ8C I$aN8&\BM67fel8#̌W*{ʁUgw6IHT`d et;MG6ykn,<dQEN&M-qשmWlkSR7(I.xso^mcFB1&Y'lyڱCX-6o:IOJǪ3j+"FUGH}g7ʝ*L #|)糝`=xdn!Jp0߃npw4ӎK/R.sPwiͪ-q 9pq܍tɢq p#HÆo,]50j+uD gGֶaEVFKk_/hWEp}'}46[K)ݎiV}upss#j-Vu^2:F ڨf9~I8D\}[R7&bI18ڪ4n\2nˆ#Sqoq7CD<הç5[  jnO=Vj{4-վp&'ӯu;Qse(CFH8<7j wW$swftM>^"q'GNrxKeER fvF N8AOT濫kW`y4RN3S4mΛcɯ[Y3dpv5(E?+=72}ʱ冽ֵ?]H??@ABCDFGHIJ_b$`B;;˃ i;b$M,E?;f*3i;b$ ە/+h;K_nR$(];軞Dҧ+sR$ϱqtHJV _ َ 0AA@8, g4BdBd^b0.ppp@ ʚ;ʚ;<4ddddh0___PPT10DBatangew RomanLLpb0pDTimes New RomanLLpb0p 0<___PPT9QnG^er4+o dHW2PNG  IHDR asRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<3PLTE3̙3̙ff33fff̙f3ff3fff3ff34o cmPPJCmp0712]IDAT0?O[Iq?۶3m・ے`ۖɩ);uȴ)~1d?C,j2lˌOIENDB`}ns+Sqރ/TpGPNG  IHDR sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<6PLTE333f3ff3fff3f33fff3f3 cmPPJCmp07128kIDAT( j0ڴً\O YCHA0VᤰTgTPѩꝮ|;]y/n&2,${DI?"& Tpm c ccQ"BCatharsis:  release of emotion : This idea of  release of emotion has been the traditional interpretation. Consider the following translation:  Some persons fall into a religious frenzy, and we see them restored as a result of the sacred melodies-when they used the melodies that excite the soul to mystic frenzy-as though they had found healing [medical treatment] and purgation [katharsis]. Those who are influenced by pity or fear, and every emotional nature, must have a like experience, and others in so far as each is susceptible to such emotions, and all are in a manner purged and their souls lightened and delighted. The melodies which purge the passion likewise give an innocent pleasure to mankind. Politics, Book VIII, 1342.6-15.`Zqcc<ccca dN fCatharsis: 3 Reasons Against  Release of emotion :44c First, we know from Aristotle s ethics that he does not call for the  celebration or the  suppression of emotions; he argues for the  regular and  well ordered expressions (pg. 18). In the Nicomachean Ethics (Book II 1103b18) Aristotle states: c Hc c c c"cccccc(cc cR$bCatharsis: Reasons Against  Release of emotion :22c   This, then, is the case with the excellences also; by doing the acts that we do in our transactions with other men we become just or just, and by doing the acts that we do in the presence of danger, and being habituated to feel fear or confidence, we become brave or cowardly. The same is true of appetites and feelings of anger; some men become temperate and good-tempered, others self-indulgent and irascible, by behaving in one way or the other in the appropriate circumstances. Thus, in one word, states arise out of like activities. This is why the activities we exhibit must be a certain kind; it is because the states correspond to the differences between these. It makes no small difference, then, whether we form habits of one kind or of another from our very youth; it makes a very great difference, or rather all the difference. ,Pc OcS#dCatharsis: 3 reasons against  Release of Emotion 33  Second, music and poetry  educates our emotions because songs contain images of anger, courage and other traits (Politics, Book VIII, 1340a-1921. Consider the following excerpt:  Since then music is a pleasure, and excellence consists in rejoicing and loving and hating rightly, there is clearly nothing which we are so much concerned to acquire and to cultivate as the power of forming right judgments, and of taking delight in good dispositions and noble actions. Rhythm and melody supply imitations of anger and gentleness, and also of courage and temperance, and of all the qualities contrary to these, and of the other qualities of character, which hardly fall short of the actual affections, as we know from our own experience, for in listening to such strains our souls undergo a change. Politics, Book VIII, 1340a14-22. pDZc cclcccT%#Catharsis: Another Interpretation:$$(Z Aristotle later states:  Enough has been said to show that music has a power of forming the character, and should therefore be introduced into the education of the young. The study is suited to the stage of youth, for young persons will not, if they can help, endure anything which is not sweetened by pleasure, and music has a natural sweetness. There seems to be in us a sort of affinity to musical modes and rhythms, which makes some philosophers say that a soul is a harmony, others, that is possesses harmony. Politics, Book VIII, 1340b 11-19. N. c cccO!RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$2 And third, delight over the whole experience trains the soul to enjoy the sight of real-world virtue. Politics, Book VIII; 1340a22-27. Therefore, on this view Pappas notes that catharsis is a clarification of emotion. This is the view held by L. Golden, R. Janko, and M.C. Nussbaum. Pappas states:3c hc ccc ccc'U&RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$  Training emotions has nothing to do with releasing them. Training presupposes that the emotions are here to stay, and need to be calibrated to fit the real-world situations that call them forth& By rousing powerful emotions with a simpler train of events than life provides, tragedy teaches how fear and pity feel and where they are appropriate. That understanding forms part of the groundwork for ethical behavior, since Aristotle connect ethical behavior to well-trained emotions. Thus the clarification view helps harmonize Aristotlee s aesthetic with his ethics (pg. 18).EEc &V'RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$P Nevertheless, this view has a glaring difficulty. While this view offers contextual support to Aristotle s argument against Plato s view of art, music, and poetry, in Politics Book VIII, 1342a7-15, Aristotle refers to catharsis as a relief, something that makes the soul  settle down (pg. 18).B)ccxcW(LCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Pappas, others still (e.g., Gerald Else) contend that catharsis does not mean  purging of emotions or  clarification of emotions. Rather, than being a psychological word, this word is a literary, narratological term since coherent and significant plot structure is the goal of tragedy (pg. 19). This is a minority view. It has the advantage of looking in the Poetics for an argument about what literature knows and how it says it. f:ccBccCcoBLCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Beardsley,  Professor Else, on the other hand, translates the passage as follows:  carrying to completion, through a course of events in involving pity and fear, the purification of those painful or fatal acts which have that quality. The purgation, in his reading, is a purification, and it is not something that takes place in the spectator at all, but something that takes place in the play. It is carried out by the plot itself, in virtue of the fact that the plot consists of events of a certain sort (Professor Else takes pathematon as tragic events, because pathos in later chapters means this) (pg. 65). fw!c ccc+c! LX*%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$1. Mimesis is natural to people from childhood (Poetics 1448b6) as opposed to Plato who saw image-making as a lower-level metaphysical perversion. Plato thought of mimesis two fold: as (a) impersonating and the (b)  mock up or production of a likeness of something. 2. Mimesis is a natural propensity and pleasant because it is a way of learning (Poetics 1448b13; cf. 1448b8) as opposed to Plato who wants knowledge to come in the form of universal statements, the highest sort of learning.f0cccccZ,%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$C3. Humans love to learn (Metaphysics I.1) and mimesis brings determination and simplification to learning as opposed to Plato who finds it to be denigrating to a virtuous education. Aristotle saw mimesis can involve representation, it is not mimicry nor counterfeiting. 4. Aristotle argues that mimesis takes action as its object thus, tragedy communicates authentically philosophical knowledge as opposed to Plato who argued that mimesis is passive since it either involves putting on the mask (drama) and impersonating or the production of a likeness of something (poetry). C  cc ccc2ccY+0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c@5. Aristotle takes mimesis as imitating nature because of its orderly and purposeful forms fine arts take on; these are productive purposes which are rational, consciously perceive by the mind of its maker (Metaphysics 7.7) as opposed to Plato who thought it displaced or even corrupted reason by arousing the non-rational part of the soul. 6. Only the mimetic arts have as their specific purpose to produce representations or fictional depictions of the world or reality. This is contrary to Plato because he saw mimesis as being an imitation of appearance, not reality. xUcc cfcc[.0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c2 Regarding the relationship between reality and the artwork, it is important to observe the following quote from Poetics 9:  Poetry is more philosophical and more serious than history, for it deals with universals, while history speaks of particulars. In other words, poetry is offering larger conceptions which structure human experience and understanding, bringing unity, wholeness, or completeness. pcpcc cc]/Third Word: Action.c p1. Thus, mimesis is active; mimesis communicates knowledge, it is not passive, inherently weak, corrupt, or based in ignorance. 2. Just as some consider photography as not being art because it is passive (Plato; Republic 596d), Aristotle considers mimesis to be an active process of selective presentation because of being a composer of plots, a drawer of lines, etc.>qccc^1Third Word: Action.c$ 3. Tragedy in poetry represents events and not passions just as painting is more a matter of line than of color (Poetics, 1450b2-3); 4. A good plot clearly represents an action; it restricts itself to a unified action, even if that involves differing characters and their development. In fact a tragedy imitates a complete action: a beginning, middle and an end (Poetics, 1450b26). The unity of ploy s derived from the fact that it is a single action. ccnccSc_0Third Word: Action.c >5. The unity consists in the right connections among the parts of a plot. Each even follows the other  either by necessity or probably (Poetics 1451a13, 38; 1452a20). 6. Tragedy that represents action contains a general truth. 7. Composing, plot making, play writing, are constructions; this is something musicians, story tellers, poets, and story tellers do. Hence a plot is an object that gets constructed. `  ccc`2Third Word: Action.c$xPotential misreading of Plato: A. Some have argued that Plato s analogy of a mirror meant to capture not passive automatism, but superficiality. B. Plato may think that the perversity is misusing their talents to produce so little that is virtuous. C. Plato may have been concerned that characterization, not plot, was the problem of mimesis; to duplicate an appearance is the issue when you are strive for the universal form.  P Pcc cc cccpCThird Word: Action.c$ - Even if this is the case, the Poetics assert that plot supremacy over character establishes a defense of the arts. The causal principle makes the story plausible and contains the tragedy s general statement. Therefore, tragedy communicated knowledge.n  ac caa\-Fourth Word: Seriousness:The tragic character be good, serious, superior people (Poetics 1448a2; 1454a17).  These character s dignity and standing ensure the importance of what they undertake and undergo (pg. 22). Aristotle did not want tragedy to present meaningless suffering; tragic effect is  disgusting , Poetics 1452b36) where as appearance of purpose or order is  fine (Poetics 1452a6-10) (pg. 22-23).8cccc=ccca3Fourth Word: Seriousness:Associates bad consequences to a character s  hamartia (Poetics 1453a10) which simply means a mistake, error of judgment, foolishness, or self-deception in classical Greek. (pg. 23). It is not used as a defect of character but an action; the misfortune of heroes depends on what they do. Tragic plots have strong causal connects whereby it instructs the audience on morality; mimesis imparts knowledge (pg. 23). Luck is also involved; things may not turn out the way one necessarily hopes; this is the plight of the tragic hero does. Therefore, for Aristotle, there is  value in the seriousness of tragedy (pg. 23).#PP|PPzPPSP:cccc|cczccScc56Aristotle s View of Beauty:Aristotle uses  beauty (kalos) 19 times in Poetics as compliment for tragic plots, language, and character. Only once does Aristotle make  beauty a defining  criterion for tragedies, when he says they must be neither too long to surpass what the memory can hold, not too short to count as serious (Poetics 1451a4-15) (pg. 24). Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5) Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes: mPP{PccccZccccJc c3c c"ck?6Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5). Consider Aristotle s comment in Poetics 1450b35:  either a living creature of any structure made of parts, must have not only an orderly arrangement of these parts but a size which is not accidental-for beauty lies in size and arrangement&  z}PPP2c c/cccd66Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes:  Those who suppose, as the Pythagoreans and Speusippus do, that supreme beauty and goodness are not present in the beginning, because the beginnings both of plants and of animals are causes, but beauty and completeness are in the effects of these, are wrong in their opinion. For the seed comes from other individuals which are prior and complete, and the first thing is not seed but the complete being, e.g., we must say that before the seed there is a man,-not the man produced from the seed, but another from whom the seed is produced. LQP P%c cAc e86Aristotle s View of Beauty: Moreover, in Parts of Animals, 645a23-25, Aristotle relates beauty to design:  Absence of haphazard and conduciveness of everything to an end are to be found in nature s works in the highest degree, and the end for which those work are put together and produced is a form of the beautiful. So, while Aristotle s view of beauty may be vague, it is clear that he believed beauty to be objective; beauty is derived from the nature of the beautiful object; it is related to size and proportion; it is related to design.@ Pcccb4RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$XWhile Aristotle doesn t provide offer a robust account of philosophical aesthetics whereby he deals with the problems of defending aesthetic judgments, we are able to conclude the following: Aesthetics involves objective reality; it is cognitively perceived and can be imitated. Aesthetics is pedagogically valuable and serious. Beauty is a real property; He is an empiricist who believed all knowledge begins in the senses.nPXPP2PPaPccl>RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Aesthetics involves aesthetic experiences; he doesn t deny its impact on people. In fact, we take pleasure in imitation because it is a special case of learning. In fact, the unity of plot, etc. may be seen as an aesthetic predicate. Mimesis or imitation involves a special kind of representation: it is a matter of representing an object. It can be the art of imitating visual appearances by means of color and drawing or the art of imitating human actions by means of dance and song.:PPccqDRFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Mimesis in poetry, in order to have its impact, must involve a real understanding of human nature; for without this knowledge you can t have a very good play (Beardsley, 63). Therefore, psychological laws must be true one for dramatic development: Aristotle is a structural and textual critic because he analyzes aspects of structure, chiefly concerned with plot. If catharsis is seen as a structural concept rather than a psychological one, then this description of Aristotle is appropriate. One can also say he is textual critic because he is concerned with analysis at the verbal level: Rhetoric. :PbPcbcrERFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$Beardsley makes two comments that are most interesting to consider. First:  What Plato feared most as a bad example for Athenian youth was the suggestion that good men are unhappy and that bad men prosper. Aristotle s reply might be understood in this way: there is no need to have a moral censorship of plays, but only an aesthetic one. For the play about the good man who becomes unhappy or the bad man who becomes happy will simply not be a very good tragedy; other things being equal, morality and justice will coincide with aesthetic excellence (Aesthetics, pg. 67). ~LPPPLcc c ccm<RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$nAnd secondly, Monroe Beardsley observes:  When Aristotle inquires into the  nature of something& He asks: what is the nature of the poetic art? And the answer is both normative and descriptive. For it involves a set of categories that play a fundament role in all of his thinking: the  four causes, or four types of explanation (see Physics II, vii). These are not mentioned in the Poetics itself, but it is interesting that in the Metaphysics (V [ ], ii) when he distinguishes the four causes, his example of the  material cause is  the bronze of the statue ; the  formal cause is the pattern, or  formula of the essence ; the  efficient cause is the productive agent (e.g., the sculptor and his activity); the  final cause is  the end, i.e., that for the sake of which a thing is (trans. Ross) (pp. 55-56). *P PP*c[cc+c ccco c cpn=Final Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics: Four causes for the statue of Athena:,T.c$&c$ <PPcci: Postscript:4A.E. Taylor makes an interesting claim about the Poetics:  Poetics was meant to be a collection of rules by obeying which the craftsman might make sure of turning out a successful play. So far as Aristotle has a Philosophy of Fine Art at all, it forms part of his more general theory of education and must be looked for in the general discussion of the aims of education in his Politics. Aristotle, 20-21.L:a1Q  f7 Bibliography:)Aristotle, The Complete Works of Aristotle, rev. Oxford Translation, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 Vols. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984). Monroe Beardsley, Aesthetics: From Classical Greek to the Present: A Short History (Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1966). A Companion to Aesthetics (Malden, M.A.: Blackwell, 1992, 1995). Routledge Companion to Aesthetics, edited by Berys Gaut and Dominic McIver Lopes (London: Routledge, 2001). A.E. Taylor, Aristotle, 3rd edition (Toronto, Ontario: General Publishing 1955). PPPPBPPmPPTP ccncccBc7ccBcc!cLcc c cck8cc, 0` ___,,B̙f` f3 ޚ` ` ff,,B3f33` 3ff3fPP3f3` P3fPP3` ff333tfff` @EoOV>?" dd@,? " Pd@  < " d@ `"  n?" dd@   @@``@n?" dd@  @@``PP   @ ` ` p>> H @ (  F  "  Hd "  T?? "`  Bd"n   S 0AARTBANNA"ht   c 6ףAARTBANND"hn   S 0AARTHSEPA"Pz  < "  Z   ȜȜ?"   T Click to edit Master title style! !$  0 "  RClick to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level!     S  0X "``  @*    0䟓 "`   B*    0 "`   B* Z  B޽h @ ? ___,,B̙f___PPT9:p:: *Artsy design templateW  0  0(  F  "  Hd "p  T?? "`p  Bd"t   c 6AARTBANNA"`t   c 6ףAARTBANND"hn   S 0AARTHSEPA"z   < "  ZR   ȜȜ?"p  T Click to edit Master title style! !  0U "` P   W#Click to edit Master subtitle style$ $  0|Z "`P  @*   0^ "`   B*   0Xc "`0  B* Z  B޽h @ ? ___,,B̙f0 @(  r  S dn0  r  S oPP@@  z  DA> aristotle"` H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn0A0 "`(  x  c $<0 9  x  c $tp 9  z  DA> aristotle"` H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn0A0 (  x  c $h͡p  x  c $,Ρp  `  c 8Aaristotle H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn0A: 0 P:(  r  S xܡ      S PݡP  "P@08XH  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 F(  x  c $       c $h Pp  "H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $    x  c $P  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $    x  c $P  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $2   2 x  c $2P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0  0(   x   c $I2   2 x   c $lG2P 2 H   0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $e2   2 x  c $f2P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 D0(  Dx D c ${2   2 x D c $d|2P 2 H D 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0  0(  x  c $m2   2 x  c $x2P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 00(  x  c $`2   2 x  c $82P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $9    x  c $   H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 `$0(  $x $ c $(2   2 x $ c $2P 2 H $ 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 @0(  x  c $Զ2   2 x  c $2 p 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 ,0(  ,x , c $H2   2 x , c $ 2 p 2 H , 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 p(0(  (x ( c $2P  2 x ( c $T2Pp 2 H ( 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 40(  4x 4 c $     x 4 c $t Pp   H 4 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 P 0(   x   c $P      x   c $ P   H   0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 80(  8x 8 c $-      x 8 c $l. P   H 8 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 <0(  <x < c $=      x < c $> P   H < 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 @0(  @x @ c $L      x @ c $M P   H @ 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 p0(  x  c $8%9     9  x  c $P 9  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 HF(  Hx H c $X[       H c $0` P   "p`PpH H 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 PF(  Px P c $k       P c $@q P   "p`PpH P 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 LF(  Lx L c $}       L c $    "p`PpH L 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 0XF(  Xx X c $       X c $   "p`PpH X 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 @\F(  \x \ c $0oJ     J   \ c $  J  "p`PpH \ 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 `dF(  dx d c $|      d c $J   "p`PpH d 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 P`F(  `x ` c $i      ` c $ج   "p`PpH ` 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 phF(  hx h c $0       h c $~  "p`PpH h 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 F(  x  c $w       c $  "p`PpH  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d$ 0  T$(  Tr T S l    r T S D,  H T 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 l0(  lx l c $    x l c $^  H l 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 t0(  tx t c $    x t c $  H t 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 @0(  x  c $&    9  x  c $&  9  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 x0(  xx x c $P^    x x c $  H x 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 0(  x  c $`    x  c $|  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 p0(  px p c $;    x p c $Y@P  H p 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 00(  x  c $ȃ&    &  x  c $& P &  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 0(  x  c $k9    9  x  c $P 9  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 0(  x  c $    x  c $P  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 0 0 0(  x  c $8_    x  c $߰   H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp 4 0  4(  x  c $8\&    &  x  c $   &  p  C HA0Bronze Statue of Athena  0$P& @ $N 2 intrinsic causes: Material Cause = Bronze; out of which it was made. Formal Cause = Pattern, form, essence; of which it was made. 2 External causes: Efficient Cause = Artist; by which it was made Final Cause = The purpose; that for which it was made.O0 2(@ % 9 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp $ 0 $(  r  S a    r  S Ʊ  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Uq $ 0 |$(  |r | S T.    r | S `*  H | 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Oq݋zr,p/ F7g G w"_? $&)-+2/y4MB69c;=yDOF!KYMb'_}HQqXZW+?T9V7=dr1z( sL/ 0|DArial NarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"DArialOh+'08U $0 P \ h t(Is there an Aesthetic Point of View?ShockPaArtsy design templateShockPa18Microsoft PowerPoint@ @@@cAYn@mqQGSg  )'    """)))UUUMMMBBB999|PP3f333f3333f3ffffff3f̙3ff333f333333333f33333333f33f3ff3f3f3f3333f33̙33333f333333f3333f3ffffff3f33ff3f3f3f3fff3ffffffffff3ffff̙fff3fffff3fff333f3f3ff3ff33f̙̙3̙ff̙̙̙3f̙3f333f3333f3ffffff3f̙3f3f3f333f3333f3ffffff3f̙3f3ffffffffff!___www4'A x(xKʦ """)))UUUMMMBBB999|PP3f3333f333ff3fffff3f3f̙f3333f3333333333f3333333f3f33ff3f3f3f3333f3333333f3̙33333f333ff3ffffff3f33f3ff3f3f3ffff3fffffffff3fffffff3f̙ffff3ff333f3ff33fff33f3ff̙3f3f3333f333ff3fffff̙̙3̙f̙̙̙3f̙3f3f3333f333ff3fffff3f3f̙3ffffffffff!___wwwCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmmmCL*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*L+L*L*L*mmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmmmCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmmmmmKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnKnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmCmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmDmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmmmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmmCmmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCCCmCCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8C!mm8CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmCmCmmmmmmmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8CC!"!!Cmm8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8!Cm8mCCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCCmCCCCCCmCCCCmCmmmCmmmmmmmmmCmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8C"CC!!CJICrmCCCC!!!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CmmmCC!C8CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8!!CmrmCCCCC!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CCCrmmmC8mCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8C!!!Cm¼mmI"CC!!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mrmCmC8CCCCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCCCCCCCmCmmCmmCCmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8¼¼mCmCC8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8m¼¼CC8mCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCmCCCCCCCCCCmmmmCmmmmmCmmmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8B!mrCCC!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8r¼¼smmmC8CCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCCmCCmCCCmCCmCCCmCmmCmmmCmmmCmmCmmmCmmmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8C¼¼¼CIC!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8¼mCmm8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8C!C¼CCCmC!!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8Cm¼mCmC8CCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8CCmCCm!!CC8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mmmsmmCCCCC!ICC8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmCCmCmmmmmmmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!mümmC!CCICCCmI!CC!!8mmmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmCCCmmCmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8C¼mmCCCmC!8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8C¼¼ü¼˜CCCCCCC!8mmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmCmCmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mCCCrC8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!CmCm!!CCmm!"C!!8mmmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8m¼¼mmmmmCCCC8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8!¼¼mmmCC!8mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CümCCmmC8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCmmmmmmmmCmCmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!mmmmmCC!8mmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mmCüüü!Cmrm8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCCmmmCmmmmmmmCmCmCmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8mCmrCCmmmImCCC!!8mmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CCCm¼¼!"mC!CmCm8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmmCmCmCCmCmCmCmCmmmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmCCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!CCms¼CCmCC!CCCCC!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mCCmr¼mCmCC8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8mmCmmmmmmm¼CmC!CmmC8mmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmCmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CmCCmmmCC!ICm!Cm8mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!CmImCrCCrm!C!!mmmJ8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CmmmrmmmCCCC!m8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8CmmmmCmCCCCCCCC!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8Cmm¼mmCCm"CmCC8mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!C¼C!CC!!CC!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8C¼¼¼CCCCm8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmC8’¼¼mrmm!CCCmm8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8C¼¼¼¼CmCCmC8mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!C˜¼mmCC!CCCI!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8rmm¼mmC!CC8CmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8Im!mr¼¼¼¼rmCC!C!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8mCmmmm¼mmCCCC8mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmCmCmmmCmCmmmmmmmmCmmCmmmmmmmCmmmCmmmC8!C’¼mCC!CCmCC!8mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CrmmmmmCC"CmCC8CmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCmCCmmCmCCmmmmmCmmmCmC8!mmmmmmmmCCCmCCCm8mm0)0)0)0)0)0mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CJmmmCmmmmmmmCmCC!mC8m)0)0)0)0)0)mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!CsmCm¼mrmrmmmmC!CCC!C8mmQ)Q)Q)Q)Q)Qmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8!mmCCmmmmmmmrmC8)0)Q)0)Q)0)mCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmm8CmCmCCmmCm!mCICC!!8CmmmQ)Q)Q)Q)Q)Qmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CmmrmmCmm!CmCC8mmmm)Q)Q)Q)****DJJDDJCDDK#CDJ"DDJ#DDE#DDJDJDKDDDJDDDKDDDKDDDKmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!mmrmmmrrCmrmCCCImCCCC!!8mmCmQQQ)QJQR*R*K#K#J#J"K#D#D"J"J"DE$K#J#J*K$K#K#J#J*K*K$EDKmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CCIImCmmrmCmmmCCmCmCCC8mmmm)Q)Q)Q)Q)Q)mCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmC8CCCmmrmCmmCmCCCC8CmCmQ)QJQJQJQ)Qmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm8CCICCCmmmCC8mmmm)Q)QJQ)Q)Q)mmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmC8!!!!"CCCC!!C!CCC8mmCmQJQJQQQJQJQmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888mmmm)QJQ)QJQ)QJmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmQJQJQJQJQJQmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJQJQJQJQJQJmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmsQQJsQQJsQQmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJQJQJQJQJQJmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsJsJsJsJsJsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJsJQJsJQJsJmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmsQsJsQsJsQsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJQJsJQJsJQJmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsJsQsJsJsJsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmJsJsJsJsJsJmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCCCCCCCCCCCCCmCCCCCmCCCCCmCCCCCmCCCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCCCCCCCCCCCmCCCmCCCCCCCCCmCCCmCmCCCCCmCCCmCCCmCmCCCCCmCCCmCCCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsssJsssJsssmmmmmmmm8C8C8Cm8C888C888888mC8888Cm888Cmm888Cmm8C8Cm888C888C888Cm8Cm888C8888C888C888Cmm88mm888C888Cm888mmmm888Cm888m888mmmm888Cm88mC888mmmmmmmmmmmmmmJsJsJsJsJsJmCmCmCmC888C8Cm8C8m8C8CC8Cm8C8CC8C8Cm8mCm8m8CCm888C8CC8C8C8C8C8Cm8C8CC8C8Cm8C8C8C8m8CCm8CCm8C8C8C8CC8CmCCCC8C8CC8CmC8CmCmCm8C8CC8C8Cm8CCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsJsssmsssJsmmmmmmCm8C8C8CC8Cm88m8Cm8Cm8C8Cm8C8CCCCmmm88mmC8C8C8CCCCm88m8C8Cm8C8CCCC8Cm8C8C8mm88mmC8Cmm8m8C8C8Cm8mC888m8m8Cm8mCm8mCmmmm8C8Cm8C8Cm8CmmmmmmmCmmmmmmJsJsmsJsJsJmCmCmCmC8C8C8Cm8C88CC8CC8Cm8C8CC8C8888CCm88CCCm8C8C8888C88mC8C8Cm8C8888C8CC8C8CCC88CCCm8CCmC88C888CCm8mCmCmC88CCm8mCm8mCmCm88CCC8C8Cm8CCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsssmsssssssCmmmmmmm8C8C8CC8C8C8C8888CC8m8888C8CC8mmC8C8Cmm8C8C8CC8m8C8C888CC8C8CC8m8888m8C8C8C8Cmm8Cmm8C8C8C8CmmC8CCmm8C8CmCC8CmC8CCmm8C8Cm8CmCm88mCmmmmmmmCmmmmJsmsJsmsJsmmCmCmCmC8C8C88mCC888m8CC888Cm8CC8C888Cm8C888mCm8C8C888mC888C8C8888m888mC8CmCC888m888mCm8CCm8C8C8C8CC8C8CmCm8C8CC8C8C8C8CmCm8C8CC8C8Cm8CCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsmsssmsssmsmmCmmmCm888mmmC8mmCmm8CmmmCmm8Cm8mCmmmC8mmCmmmC888CmmmCmmmCm8m8mmmCmmmCm8mC8mmCmmmCmmmC88mC888C888Cm888mmmC888Cm888m888mmmC888Cm888m88CmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmsmsmsmsmsmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmssssssssCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmmmCmsmsmsmsmsmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsmsssssmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsmsmsmsmsmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmsssssCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmCmCmmmCmsmmsmsmsmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCDCmDDE$EELEL$EDDDDEJDCJCJCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCDCmCJCmJJJJDDCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCDCmCJCmCJCmCmCmCmCmCJDKoKJKKKKKsssssCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEDKKJJEDEEKEKEKELELFLELFLFMLLELFLELEEDKDDDKEKELLLKLKLKLLLKoKKEnmDmDmCmJKKmJmJJnEnEnKKKoKoLtKnKnJmKnmDJnKoLuLtLuLuLusmsmssmmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCEnEnEnEEDKEEDKEKELEK$KEKELELEL$LFL$LEL$E$L$LEL$LFL$KELEKEKEKELEKEKDEKLKLLLKKKnEKEnEKKLKLKoKLKoEnKoKKEoKLLtLoLoKoLoKsssssCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmnKoEnEKDEEKEKEKEKEnEKEKEoLLELELELFLLLLLELLL%LFLFLFLEKEKEKEKEKELKoKoKtLtLoLoKnEnEnEnKoLLLoLoKoKnKoKnKoKoKtLtLoKoKoKommmmmmmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmC#EEhEKEEDEEEDEDEDEDE#EDEEEEE$EEKEFEL%L$L$L%L%L$L$L$E$E$E$E$E$EELELELKLLLKKEKEEEKDEEKELLLKLKLEKEKEKEKEKKLKLLoKKEnEKEsssssCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEEnEoEnDEEnEEDKDEDKEDDEEKEKEKELELELLLFLFLFLLLELFL%LELEKEE$E$EELLLKLLLLtLoKnKnEnEKEnKLLLLLKLKLKoKnKoKnKoKLLtLoKnKnKosmsmsmCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCmCmCmCCCEKEKEoEEDKEEEEEEDKEEDD#E$EEEEKEEELELFLELEL%LEL$LFL$FEL$E$E$E$E$L$LELLLKLKKEKEKDKEKEKKLLLLLKLKLEKEnEKKnKLKRLLKnEKEKEssCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmKEnEoEKEnEnEKEnDEEnEKDEDEEKELELELELFLELELLLLLELELLLFLELELEE$KELELKLLLLLKnEnEnEnEnEKEoKLKoKLLoKnKnKoKoKoKoLtLtKoKoKLmsmsmsmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCDKEKEEDEEKEnEEEKEEEKDD#DDE#EEKEEEEEL$EEKELELEEELEL$L$LEK$E$E$E$E$E$L$KEKEKEKEKEKEKEKDKEKEKKLKKEKEKKoKKKLKLLoKKEKEKEsssCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEEnEnEKDoKoEnEnEnEnEnDEDEDEDKELELELELELELELLLELELELELELEKEKEK$KEKEKEKELEKEnEnEnEKEnEKEnEnEnKLKnEnKoKoKoKoLtLLKoKKKLsmsmsmCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCDKEKEKEEEoLnEKEKEnEnEK#DDEDEDEEKELEKEK$EELELELEKEK$EEL$E$E$E$L$FEF$E$E$EEK$EEKEEDKEKEKEKEnKLELEKEnKnELEKLtLLKoKKELECmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmKEnEnEnEoooKoEKEoKnEnEE#DDEEEEEELKLKLELELLLELLoKLEEELELELEKELELELLLELELELEKEKEKEnKnEoEnKoKtKoLoEnKoKnKnEoLtKnLoKoLLmsmsmsCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCCCmCCCCCDEDE#EDEEoEEEE#EEE$K$E#DDDEDDDE#KKL$LEL$LELELKLEE$E#E$E#E$E$EEE$KKLELFL$EEK#E$EDKEKEKKLKLKLKLKKEKEnEKEKDKKKEKKLELECmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEEKEEEnEoLoEKEEELKKEKEEDDDEEEDEDEELELELLLLLLLLoLLEKDEEE#E$EEEEKEEELLLELKLKLELELEEEKKLKoLLLoLoKoKnEnEnEnEnEnEKKoLLFLsmmsmCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCmCCCDEDEDnDEEoKLELELKLELEEDDDDDDDD#D#E#EELELLLFLLLKLELEE#E#D#K$E$E$EELKLEKELKLKLLLKLKLELLLKLKLKLLRKLKKEKEKDKEnEKELKLLLFCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEEEDKEnEoLoKoLLKLKLELEKDDDDDEDDDDDE#KELLLLLLLLLKLEKEKDE#KEKEEEKEKELKLKLKoLLKoLoKRLRKLLLLtLRLuLtLoKnEnEKEnEKEoLLLLLLmsmsmsCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCDEDEDEEKELKLEKKLEKELEKED#DDDDDDD#D#E#EELELELELELEEDE#E#D#E#E#E$E#EEL$E$KEKEKELKLKLLL$L$LKLKL*LLLKKEKDEDEDEEK$LKLELFCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmCmEEnEEDKELLoKKELKLKKKKEKDDDDDDDDDD#EEE$KEKELKLFLEKEEDEDKDDDE#E#EDE#KEEDKELEKEKKLKLLR*L*LLLKLLLLLLLEKEEDKDEEKELKLKLKLssKsmns*J#J#)#K"J#J#)#n#)))#J#K"CCCCCCmCCCEKEEDE$LKLKKEKEKKK$K$E#D#D#D"D"D#E#E#E#E$E$EEK$EDEDDDDDDDD#D#D#D#E#E#EEELEKEKKLKRKL*L$L$L$LKLKLEKEEDEDDEEDEEKEKKL*1*1*RQR*0*1*0***1***0***1*******1***mCmCmCmCmKEKEKDEKLLLKKEKELKKKKED#JDDDDDDDDDE#E#K$KEEEKEKEKDDDDDDDEDD"DDD#E#EEE#DEoELELELKRLL*LKL$L$KELLLKLEKEEDEDKEKEKEKELKL***0*0**)***#*#*)*#*#*)*)*)*#*)*)*)*CCCCCCCCC$E$K$E#K$L$K$E$K*KEK$E#D#D#D"D"D"##D##$E###D#E#ED"D"DCD"D"C#"D##E#D#E#E#E$L$L$K$K$K$*$L$KKL$EEE#E$E#EEE#E$K$KK1*0*0*1******#***)*#*#*)*)*)*)*)*)**mCmCmCmCmK$KKK$K$KKLKKEKKRKLKK#D#E#D#D#D#D#E#E#E$E#E#D#EDDCDCDCDCD"DCC"D"DD$E#D#E#EDEDKKL$L$K$K$E$L*K$K$K$EEEEKEE$K$E#EEK*K*****1**)*#*#*#*#*#)#)#)#*#)#*#*)*)*CCCCCCCCC$K$K*K#$$L$K$K$KKK*K#D#D#D"D#D"######E##$#D#"CCCCC"C"C"C##D##E#E#D$KKK$E$E#E$K*K$K#K$EE$E#E$K$K#D#E#K#+***+****)*#*#*#*#)#)#)#*))#K)*#K)*)mCmCmCmCmK*L*L*K$K*K*K$E$RKK#D"D#K#D"D#J"D###E###E$$"D##C"C"C"C"C"C"C"C"D#DD"C#EDD#D#KKKKK#KEE#KKK*L#K*K$D#E$E$L$L$E#D#K)K$$$*#$$*#$##########"#")###)"##)#))JCCCCCCCCC$***$*$$#$$K##$*K##"##*####"#"C$#$#$#$#$##""""CC"C"C"""D"D##K$K#K###D#D*K$##K#$$$$$#$E$##")#*$E#$#K$*$K#$#D"D#J"J#J)J#*###J)J)J(mCmCmCmCm+*+*+*K$*$K#####K*K#J#J#J#)"D"D"##$#$$$$#$##C"C"CCC"C"C"CC"D#DD#EJ*K#K#D"D#D#K*K#K*$#F$$$$E$$$E#D#))J0DD#D#**R**#J"I"J"I)Q)Q*$$#$#Q/P(PCCCCCCCCC*+****$*$*####*K#D#D###)"#"#""$##$$#$##"CC""C!C!C"#""##K#K$D"K#D"D"D"##D*K*D"K#$$$$$#$$$$#"#*#XDDCDCD*R1R1QIIIPIIJWQR0X$+$+$*0XPPPmCmCmCmCm+*+*+*+**$$#$###Q*J#J#J#J#)"J"C"D#####$#)####C"CC"C!CC!C!C"D"""J*J*R#D*K#D#D#D#D#K*R#J#E$$$*$$#$$$$$##)))( sL/ 0|DArial NarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"DArialNarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ" DImpactarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"0DTimes New RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ@DBatangew RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ B0.  @n?" dd@  @@`` p2 !"#$%&'(*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDFGHIJK_b$`B;;˃ i;b$M,E?;f*3i;b$ ە/+h;K_nR$(];軞Dҧ+sR$ϱqtHJV _ َ 0AA@8, g4BdBd^b0^ppp@ ʚ;ʚ;<4ddddh0___PPT10DBatangew RomanLLpb0pDTimes New RomanLLpb0p 0<___PPT9QnG^er4+o dHW2PNG  IHDR asRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<3PLTE3̙3̙ff33fff̙f3ff3fff3ff34o cmPPJCmp0712]IDAT0?O[Iq?۶3m・ے`ۖɩ);uȴ)~1d?C,j2lˌOIENDB`}ns+Sqރ/TpGPNG  IHDR sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<6PLTE333f3ff3fff3f33fff3f3 cmPPJCmp07128kIDAT( j0ڴً\O YCHA0VᤰTgTPѩꝮ|;]y/n&2,${DI?"& Tpm?@ABCDEFGHIJKLNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~@      !"#$%&'()*,-./0123456789:?ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~Root EntrydO)Uϗmq PicturesvCurrent User)5SummaryInformation(hUPowerPoint Document(MSDocumentSummaryInformation8 NarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ" DImpactarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"0DTimes New RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ@DBatangew RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ B0.  @n?" dd@  @@`` p2 !"#$%&'(*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDFGHIJK_b$`B;;˃ i;b$M,E?;f*3i;b$ ە/+h;K_nR$(];軞Dҧ+sR$ϱqtHJV _ َ 0AA@8, g4BdBd^b0^ppp@ ʚ;ʚ;<4ddddh0___PPT10DBatangew RomanLLpb0pDTimes New RomanLLpb0p 0<___PPT9QnG^er4+o dHW2PNG  IHDR asRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<3PLTE3̙3̙ff33fff̙f3ff3fff3ff34o cmPPJCmp0712]IDAT0?O[Iq?۶3m・ے`ۖɩ);uȴ)~1d?C,j2lˌOIENDB`}ns+Sqރ/TpGPNG  IHDR sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<6PLTE333f3ff3fff3f33fff3f3 cmPPJCmp07128kIDAT( j0ڴً\O YCHA0VᤰTgTPѩꝮ|;]y/n&2,${DI?"& Tpm c ccQ"BCatharsis:  release of emotion : This idea of  release of emotion has been the traditional interpretation. Consider the following translation:  Some persons fall into a religious frenzy, and we see them restored as a result of the sacred melodies-when they used the melodies that excite the soul to mystic frenzy-as though they had found healing [medical treatment] and purgation [katharsis]. Those who are influenced by pity or fear, and every emotional nature, must have a like experience, and others in so far as each is susceptible to such emotions, and all are in a manner purged and their souls lightened and delighted. The melodies which purge the passion likewise give an innocent pleasure to mankind. Politics, Book VIII, 1342.6-15.`Zqcc<ccca dN fCatharsis: 3 Reasons Against  Release of emotion :44c First, we know from Aristotle s ethics that he does not call for the  celebration or the  suppression of emotions; he argues for the  regular and  well ordered expressions (pg. 18). In the Nicomachean Ethics (Book II 1103b18) Aristotle states: c Hc c c c"cccccc(cc cR$bCatharsis: Reasons Against  Release of emotion :22c   This, then, is the case with the excellences also; by doing the acts that we do in our transactions with other men we become just or just, and by doing the acts that we do in the presence of danger, and being habituated to feel fear or confidence, we become brave or cowardly. The same is true of appetites and feelings of anger; some men become temperate and good-tempered, others self-indulgent and irascible, by behaving in one way or the other in the appropriate circumstances. Thus, in one word, states arise out of like activities. This is why the activities we exhibit must be a certain kind; it is because the states correspond to the differences between these. It makes no small difference, then, whether we form habits of one kind or of another from our very youth; it makes a very great difference, or rather all the difference. ,Pc OcS#dCatharsis: 3 reasons against  Release of Emotion 33  Second, music and poetry  educates our emotions because songs contain images of anger, courage and other traits (Politics, Book VIII, 1340a-1921. Consider the following excerpt:  Since then music is a pleasure, and excellence consists in rejoicing and loving and hating rightly, there is clearly nothing which we are so much concerned to acquire and to cultivate as the power of forming right judgments, and of taking delight in good dispositions and noble actions. Rhythm and melody supply imitations of anger and gentleness, and also of courage and temperance, and of all the qualities contrary to these, and of the other qualities of character, which hardly fall short of the actual affections, as we know from our own experience, for in listening to such strains our souls undergo a change. Politics, Book VIII, 1340a14-22. DZc rcc:cclcccT%#Catharsis: Another Interpretation:$$(Z Aristotle later states:  Enough has been said to show that music has a power of forming the character, and should therefore be introduced into the education of the young. The study is suited to the stage of youth, for young persons will not, if they can help, endure anything which is not sweetened by pleasure, and music has a natural sweetness. There seems to be in us a sort of affinity to musical modes and rhythms, which makes some philosophers say that a soul is a harmony, others, that is possesses harmony. Politics, Book VIII, 1340b 11-19. N. c cccO!RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$2 And third, delight over the whole experience trains the soul to enjoy the sight of real-world virtue. Politics, Book VIII; 1340a22-27. Therefore, on this view Pappas notes that catharsis is a clarification of emotion. This is the view held by L. Golden, R. Janko, and M.C. Nussbaum. Pappas states:3c ha aaa ac aca'U&RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$  Training emotions has nothing to do with releasing them. Training presupposes that the emotions are here to stay, and need to be calibrated to fit the real-world situations that call them forth& By rousing powerful emotions with a simpler train of events than life provides, tragedy teaches how fear and pity feel and where they are appropriate. That understanding forms part of the groundwork for ethical behavior, since Aristotle connect ethical behavior to well-trained emotions. Thus the clarification view helps harmonize Aristotle s aesthetic with his ethics (pg. 18).DDcV'RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$P Nevertheless, this view has a glaring difficulty. While this view offers contextual support to Aristotle s argument against Plato s view of art, music, and poetry, in Politics Book VIII, 1342a7-15, Aristotle refers to catharsis as a relief, something that makes the soul  settle down (pg. 18).H)caaxaW(LCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Pappas, others still (e.g., Gerald Else) contend that catharsis does not mean  purging of emotions or  clarification of emotions. Rather, than being a psychological word, this word is a literary, narratological term since coherent and significant plot structure is the goal of tragedy (pg. 19). This is a minority view. It has the advantage of looking in the Poetics for an argument about what literature knows and how it says it. pc9ccBccCcoBLCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Beardsley,  Professor Else, on the other hand, translates the passage as follows:  carrying to completion, through a course of events in involving pity and fear, the purification of those painful or fatal acts which have that quality. The purgation, in his reading, is a purification, and it is not something that takes place in the spectator at all, but something that takes place in the play. It is carried out by the plot itself, in virtue of the fact that the plot consists of events of a certain sort (Professor Else takes pathematon as tragic events, because pathos in later chapters means this) (pg. 65). rwc c ccc+c! LX*%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$1. Mimesis is natural to people from childhood (Poetics 1448b6) as opposed to Plato who saw image-making as a lower-level metaphysical perversion. Plato thought of mimesis two fold: as (a) impersonating and the (b)  mock up or production of a likeness of something. 2. Mimesis is a natural propensity and pleasant because it is a way of learning (Poetics 1448b13; cf. 1448b8) as opposed to Plato who wants knowledge to come in the form of universal statements, the highest sort of learning.f0cc'cccZ,%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$C3. Humans love to learn (Metaphysics I.1) and mimesis brings determination and simplification to learning as opposed to Plato who finds it to be denigrating to a virtuous education. Aristotle saw mimesis can involve representation, it is not mimicry nor counterfeitin+g. 4. Aristotle argues that mimesis takes action as its object thus, tragedy communicates authentically philosophical knowledge as opposed to Plato who argued that mimesis is passive since it either involves putting on the mask (drama) and impersonating or the production of a likeness of something (poetry). C  cc ccc2ccY+0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c@5. Aristotle takes mimesis as imitating nature because of its orderly and purposeful forms fine arts take on; these are productive purposes which are rational, consciously perceive by the mind of its maker (Metaphysics 7.7) as opposed to Plato who thought it displaced or even corrupted reason by arousing the non-rational part of the soul. 6. Only the mimetic arts have as their specific purpose to produce representations or fictional depictions of the world or reality. This is contrary to Plato because he saw mimesis as being an imitation of appearance, not reality. xUcc cfcc[.0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c2 Regarding the relationship between reality and the artwork, it is important to observe the following quote from Poetics 9:  Poetry is more philosophical and more serious than history, for it deals with universals, while history speaks of particulars. In other words, poetry is offering larger conceptions which structure human experience and understanding, bringing unity, wholeness, or completeness. pcpcc cc]/Third Word: Action.c p1. Thus, mimesis is active; mimesis communicates knowledge, it is not passive, inherently weak, corrupt, or based in ignorance. 2. Just as some consider photography as not being art because it is passive (Plato; Republic 596d), Aristotle considers mimesis to be an active process of selective presentation because of being a composer of plots, a drawer of lines, etc.>qccc^1Third Word: Action.c$ 3. Tragedy in poetry represents events and not passions just as painting is more a matter of line than of color (Poetics, 1450b2-3); 4. A good plot clearly represents an action; it restricts itself to a unified action, even if that involves differing characters and their development. In fact a tragedy imitates a complete action: a beginning, middle and an end (Poetics, 1450b26). The unity of ploy s derived from the fact that it is a single action. ccqccccSc_0Third Word: Action.c >5. The unity consists in the right connections among the parts of a plot. Each even follows the other  either by necessity or probably (Poetics 1451a13, 38; 1452a20). 6. Tragedy that represents action contains a general truth. 7. Composing, plot making, play writing, are constructions; this is something musicians, story tellers, poets, and story tellers do. Hence a plot is an object that gets constructed.   ccccc`2Third Word: Action.c$xPotential misreading of Plato: A. Some have argued that Plato s analogy of a mirror meant to capture not passive automatism, but superficiality. B. Plato may think that the perversity is misusing their talents to produce so little that is virtuous. C. Plato may have been concerned that characterization, not plot, was the problem of mimesis; to duplicate an appearance is the issue when you are strive for the universal form.  P Pcc cc cccpCThird Word: Action.c$ - Even if this is the case, the Poetics assert that plot supremacy over character establishes a defense of the arts. The causal principle makes the story plausible and contains the tragedy s general statement. Therefore, tragedy communicated knowledge.p  ac cac \-Fourth Word: Seriousness:The tragic character be good, serious, superior people (Poetics 1448a2; 1454a17).  These character s dignity and standing ensure the importance of what they undertake and undergo (pg. 22). Aristotle did not want tragedy to present meaningless suffering; tragic effect is  disgusting , Poetics 1452b36) where as appearance of purpose or order is  fine (Poetics 1452a6-10) (pg. 22-23).8cccc=ccca3Fourth Word: Seriousness:Associates bad consequences to a character s  hamartia (Poetics 1453a10) which simply means a mistake, error of judgment, foolishness, or self-deception in classical Greek. (pg. 23). It is not used as a defect of character but an action; the misfortune of heroes depends on what they do. Tragic plots have strong causal connects whereby it instructs the audience on morality; mimesis imparts knowledge (pg. 23). Luck is also involved; things may not turn out the way one necessarily hopes; this is the plight of the tragic hero does. Therefore, for Aristotle, there is  value in the seriousness of tragedy (pg. 23).#PP|PPzPPSP:cccc|cczccScc56Aristotle s View of Beauty:Aristotle uses  beauty (kalos) 19 times in Poetics as compliment for tragic plots, language, and character. Only once does Aristotle make  beauty a defining  criterion for tragedies, when he says they must be neither too long to surpass what the memory can hold, not too short to count as serious (Poetics 1451a4-15) (pg. 24). Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5) Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes: mPP{PccccZccccJc c3c c"ck?6Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5). Consider Aristotle s comment in Poetics 1450b35:  either a living creature of any structure made of parts, must have not only an orderly arrangement of these parts but a size which is not accidental-for beauty lies in size and arrangement&  z}PPP2c c/cccd66Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes:  Those who suppose, as the Pythagoreans and Speusippus do, that supreme beauty and goodness are not present in the beginning, because the beginnings both of plants and of animals are causes, but beauty and completeness are in the effects of these, are wrong in their opinion. For the seed comes from other individuals which are prior and complete, and the first thing is not seed but the complete being, e.g., we must say that before the seed there is a man,-not the man produced from the seed, but another from whom the seed is produced. LQP P%c cAc e86Aristotle s View of Beauty: Moreover, in Parts of Animals, 645a23-25, Aristotle relates beauty to design:  Absence of haphazard and conduciveness of everything to an end are to be found in nature s works in the highest degree, and the end for which those work are put together and produced is a form of the beautiful. So, while Aristotle s view of beauty may be vague, it is clear that he believed beauty to be objective; beauty is derived from the nature of the beautiful object; it is related to size and proportion; it is related to design.@ Pcccb4RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$XWhile Aristotle doesn t provide offer a robust account of philosophical aesthetics whereby he deals with the problems of defending aesthetic judgments, we are able to conclude the following: Aesthetics involves objective reality; it is cognitively perceived and can be imitated. Aesthetics is pedagogically valuable and serious. Beauty is a real property; He is an empiricist who believed all knowledge begins in the senses.nPXPP2PPaPccl>RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Aesthetics involves aesthetic experiences; he doesn t deny its impact on people. In fact, we take pleasure in imitation because it is a special case of learning. In fact, the unity of plot, etc. may be seen as an aesthetic predicate. Mimesis or imitation involves a special kind of representation: it is a matter of representing an object. It can be the art of imitating visual appearances by means of color and drawing or the art of imitating human actions by means of dance and song.:PPccqDRFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Mimesis in poetry, in order to have its impact, must involve a real understanding of human nature; for without this knowledge you can t have a very good play (Beardsley, 63). Therefore, psychological laws must be true one for dramatic development: Aristotle is a structural and textual critic because he analyzes aspects of structure, chiefly concerned with plot. If catharsis is seen as a structural concept rather than a psychological one, then this description of Aristotle is appropriate. One can also say he is textual critic because he is concerned with analysis at the verbal level: Rhetoric. :PbPcbcrERFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$Beardsley makes two comments that are most interesting to consider. First:  What Plato feared most as a bad example for Athenian youth was the suggestion that good men are unhappy and that bad men prosper. Aristotle s reply might be understood in this way: there is no need to have a moral censorship of plays, but only an aesthetic one. For the play about the good man who becomes unhappy or the bad man who becomes happy will simply not be a very good tragedy; other things being equal, morality and justice will coincide with aesthetic excellence (Aesthetics, pg. 67). ~LPPPLcc c ccm<RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$nAnd secondly, Monroe Beardsley observes:  When Aristotle inquires into the  nature of something& He asks: what is the nature of the poetic art? And the answer is both normative and descriptive. For it involves a set of categories that play a fundament role in all of his thinking: the  four causes, or four types of explanation (see Physics II, vii). These are not mentioned in the Poetics itself, but it is interesting that in the Metaphysics (V [ ], ii) when he distinguishes the four causes, his example of the  material cause is  the bronze of the statue ; the  formal cause is the pattern, or  formula of the essence ; the  efficient cause is the productive agent (e.g., the sculptor and his activity); the  final cause is  the end, i.e., that for the sake of which a thing is (trans. Ross) (pp. 55-56). *P PP*c[cc+c ccco c cpn=Final Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics: Four causes for the statue of Athena:,T.c$&c$ <PPcci: Postscript:4A.E. Taylor makes an interesting claim about the Poetics:  Poetics was meant to be a collection of rules by obeying which the craftsman might make sure of turning out a successful play. So far as Aristotle has a Philosophy of Fine Art at all, it forms part of his more general theory of education and must be looked for in the general discussion of the aims of education in his Politics. Aristotle, 20-21.L:a1Q  f7 Bibliography:)Aristotle, The Complete Works of Aristotle, rev. Oxford Translation, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 Vols. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984). Monroe Beardsley, Aesthetics: From Classical Greek to the Present: A Short History (Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1966). A Companion to Aesthetics (Malden, M.A.: Blackwell, 1992, 1995). Routledge Companion to Aesthetics, edited by Berys Gaut and Dominic McIver Lopes (London: Routledge, 2001). A.E. Taylor, Aristotle, 3rd edition (Toronto, Ontario: General Publishing 1955). PPPPBPPmPPTP ccncccBc7ccBcc!cLcc c cck8cc, 0` ___,,B̙f` f3 ޚ` ` ff,,B3f33` 3ff3fPP3f3` P3fPP3` ff333tfff` @EoOV>?" dd@,? " Pd@  < " d@ `"  n?" dd@   @@``@n?" dd@  @@``PP   @ ` ` p>> H @ (  F  "  Hd "  T?? "`  Bd"n   S 0AARTBANNA"ht   c 6ףAARTBANND"hn   S 0AARTHSEPA"Pz  < "  Z   ȜȜ?"   T Click to edit Master title style! !$  0 "  RClick to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level!     S  0X "``  @*    0䟓 "`   B*    0 "`   B* Z  B޽h @ ? ___,,B̙f___PPT9:p:: *Artsy design templateW  0  0(  F  "  Hd "p  T?? "`p  Bd"t   c 6AARTBANNA"`t   c 6ףAARTBANND"hn   S 0AARTHSEPA"z   < "  ZR   ȜȜ?"p  T Click to edit Master title style! !  0U "` P   W#Click to edit Master subtitle style$ $  0|Z "`P  @*   0^ "`   B*   0Xc "`0  B* Z  B޽h @ ? ___,,B̙f0 zr (    0F P    P*    0E     R*  d  c $ ?    0  0  RClick to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level!     S  6h _P   P*    6G _   R*  H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.kqhR0 "`(  x  c $<0 9  x  c $tp 9  z  DA> aristotle"` H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn0A: 0 P:(  r  S xܡ      S PݡP  "P@08XH  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 F(  x  c $       c $h P@  "H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $    x  c $P  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 0(  x  c $    x  c $P  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 D0(  Dx D c ${2   2 x D c $d|2P 2 H D 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0  0(  x  c $m2   2 x  c $x2P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 00(  x  c $`2   2 x  c $82P 2 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 p(0(  (x ( c $2P  2 x ( c $T2Pp 2 H ( 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 P 0(   x   c $P      x   c $ P   H   0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 80(  8x 8 c $-      x 8 c $l. P   H 8 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 <0(  <x < c $=      x < c $> P   H < 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 @0(  @x @ c $L      x @ c $M P   H @ 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:d0 0 p0(  x  c $8%9     9  x  c $P 9  H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 HF(  Hx H c $X[       H c $0` P   "p`PpH H 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 `dF(  dx d c $|      d c $J   "p`PpH d 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 P`F(  `x ` c $i      ` c $ج   "p`PpH ` 0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dF 0 F(  x  c $w       c $  "p`PpH  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:dT 0  T(  x  c $8\&    &  x  c $   &    s ZA0oBronze Statue of Athena"`  0$P& @ $N 2 intrinsic causes: Material Cause = Bronze; out of which it was made. Formal Cause = Pattern, form, essence; of which it was made. 2 External causes: Efficient Cause = Artist; by which it was made Final Cause = The purpose; that for which it was made.O0 2(@ % 9 H  0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.pp rEeD,S0eG :jrlL psO wnSRuU@y{2~^ >ggjbn0ڋjs\!e6s1z  !"#$%&'(*+՜.+,D՜.+,X      (0 8 On-screen ShowCollege of Biblical StudiesS/ 5 Arial NarrowArialImpactTimes New RomanBatangArtsy design template%Aristotles Aesthetics (382-322 BC):Aristotles Aesthetics (382-322 BC): All men by nature to desire to know.the human race lives also by art and reasonings Metaphysics 1:1.Introduction:Introduction:p Discourse Outline of Aristotles Poetics: Unifying theme is Mimesis: Imitation is representationIntroduction:Introduction:!Pertinent Statement: 1449b24-28Important Words to Consider from 1449b24-28: I am indebted to Nickolas Pappas article, Aristotle in The Routledge Companion to Aesthetics, 15-26 for this discussion. First Word is Catharsis: Catharsis:#Catharsis: Three interpretations:"Catharsis: Release of emotion:"Catharsis: Release of emotion:"Catharsis: release of emotion:4Catharsis: 3 Reasons Against Release of emotion:2Catharsis: Reasons Against Release of emotion:3Catharsis: 3 reasons against Release of Emotion$Catharsis: Another Interpretation:*Catharsis is clarification of emotions:*Catharsis is clarification of emotions:*Catharsis is clarification of emotions:'Catharsis is incidents in the drama.'Catharsis is incidents in the drama.&Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.1Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.1Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.Third Word: Action.Third Word: Action.Third Word: Action.Third Word: Action.Third Word: Action.Fourth Word: Seriousness:Fourth Word: Seriousness:Aristotles View of Beauty:Aristotles View of Beauty:Aristotles View of Beauty:Aristotles View of Beauty:*Final Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics:*Final Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics:*Final Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics:*Final Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics:*Final Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics:TFinal Thoughts on Aristotles Aesthetics: Four causes for the statue of Athena: Postscript:Bibliography:  Fonts UsedDesign Template _SShockPaShockPaSlide Titles/X 8@ _TemplateIDTC010689751033-c; on 543a); Poetry relies on inspiration (Ion 534b-e; Phaedrus, 245a) rather than reason; Poetry propagates falsehoods (Republic 337-391);EPN1Ec$c 7cc1cc cc;c c cH Introduction:*Poetry arouses irrational passions that displaces reason; it is intoxicating with its seductive charms of rhythm, meter, and harmony (Book 10); Poetry imitates  appearance and not  reality ; it is a lower-level metaphysic (mimesis) (Book 10); Poetry imitates the soul s worst impulses from its better ones (Republic 605); Poetry should be banned if it cannot be justified by reason (Republic 2-4; 10)PPdPPPPPOP7ccEcc cI Pertinent Statement: 1449b24-284The fundamental aspects of Aristotle s argument appears in his definition of tragedy:  A tragedy, then, is the imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having magnitude, complete in itself; in language with pleasurable accessories, each kind brought in separately in the parts of the work; in a dramatic, not in a narrative form; with incidences arousing pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions. Here, by  language with pleasurable accessories I mean that with rhythm and harmony; and by  the kinds separately I mean that some portions are worked out with verse only, and others in turn with song. Poetics, 1449b24-28.bVZZDZV/J,Important Words to Consider from 1449b24-28:-- We will now proceed to consider some of the more weighty words of that statement which will be used to present the thesis of this book: Catharsis; Mimesis; Action; Seriousness. Let s proceed to consider all four words!)*cc)c  *  KFirst Word is Catharsis:, This word occurs twice in what we have of the Poetics. No definition is given of the word. Closing place for stating a purpose or goal is at the end of a sentence; that is where  catharsis is located in 1449b24-28:  & wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions. 7$};c.ccc ccc; a P) Catharsis: Three possible definitions with the first two being psychological and the last being literary: Catharsis refers to the  purging the emotions ; Catharsis refers to the  clarification or calibration of the emotions ; Catharsis refers to the  incidents in the drama (coherent and significant plot structures in the goal of tragedy)._0Htc _cc a L"Catharsis: Three interpretations:Word also occurs in Politics VIII where mentions the  catharsis that music and poetry deliver. Interpreters of Catharsis have extensively debated this word. Before Aristotle s use  catharsis was used in a number of ways including the following: Medical catharsis was a purgation (e.g, laxative or enema cleaning out the digestive system); Clean up or clarification.yccc cwc c8ccyaMBCatharsis:  Release of emotion : Since 19th Century Aristotelian catharsis tended to receive a medical reading. Nickolas Pappas elaborates on this interpretation:  Tragedy flushes out unruly and undesirable passions by letting them flow freely until we return to an unemotional state. The terror aroused by a well-made tragedy lets us release the thousand little terrors we normally swallow back down (pg. 17).pc ckyccch;BCatharsis:  Release of emotion :A.E. Taylor states it this way:  Aristotle has a theory which is directly aimed against this overstrained Puritanism [referring to Plato s suppression of fine arts]. He holds that the very exciting and sensational art which would be very bad as a daily food may be very useful as an occasional medicine for the soul. He would retain even the most sensational forms of music on the account for what he calls their  purgative value. In the same spirit he asserts that the function of tragedy, with its sensational representations of the calamities of its heroes, is  by the vehicle of fear and pity to purge our minds of those and similar emotions. The explanation of the theory is to be sought in the literal sense of the medical term  purgative  (Taylor, Aristotle, 109).> c ccQ"BCatharsis:  release of emotion : This idea of  release of emotion has been the traditional interpretation. Consider the following translation:  Some persons fall into a religious frenzy, and we see them restored as a result of the sacred melodies-when they used the melodies that excite the soul to mystic frenzy-as though they had found healing [medical treatment] and purgation [katharsis]. Those who are influenced by pity or fear, and every emotional nature, must have a like experience, and others in so far as each is susceptible to such emotions, and all are in a manner purged and their souls lightened and delighted. The melodies which purge the passion likewise give an innocent pleasure to mankind. Politics, Book VIII, 1342.6-15.`Zqcc<ccca dN fCatharsis: 3 Reasons Against  Release of emotion :44c First, we know from Aristotle s ethics that he does not call for the  celebration or the  suppression of emotions; he argues for the  regular and  well ordered expressions (pg. 18). In the Nicomachean Ethics (Book II 1103b18) Aristotle states: c Hc c c c"cccccc(cc cR$bCatharsis: Reasons Against  Release of emotion :22c   This, then, is the case with the excellences also; by doing the acts that we do in our transactions with other men we become just or just, and by doing the acts that we do in the presence of danger, and being habituated to feel fear or confidence, we become brave or cowardly. The same is true of appetites and feelings of anger; some men become temperate and good-tempered, others self-indulgent and irascible, by behaving in one way or the other in the appropriate circumstances. Thus, in one word, states arise out of like activities. This is why the activities we exhibit must be a certain kind; it is because the states correspond to the differences between these. It makes no small difference, then, whether we form habits of one kind or of another from our very youth; it makes a very great difference, or rather all the difference. ,Pc OcS#dCatharsis: 3 reasons against  Release of Emotion 33  Second, music and poetry  educates our emotions because songs contain images of anger, courage and other traits (Politics, Book VIII, 1340a-1921. Consider the following excerpt:  Since then music is a pleasure, and excellence consists in rejoicing and loving and hating rightly, there is clearly nothing which we are so much concerned to acquire and to cultivate as the power of forming right judgments, and of taking delight in good dispositions and noble actions. Rhythm and melody supply imitations of anger and gentleness, and also of courage and temperance, and of all the qualities contrary to these, and of the other qualities of character, which hardly fall short of the actual affections, as we know from our own experience, for in listening to such strains our souls undergo a change. Politics, Book VIII, 1340a14-22. DZc rcc:cclcccT%#Catharsis: Another Interpretation:$$(Z Aristotle later states:  Enough has been said to show that music has a power of forming the character, and should th      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~erefore be introduced into the education of the young. The study is suited to the stage of youth, for young persons will not, if they can help, endure anything which is not sweetened by pleasure, and music has a natural sweetness. There seems to be in us a sort of affinity to musical modes and rhythms, which makes some philosophers say that a soul is a harmony, others, that is possesses harmony. Politics, Book VIII, 1340b 11-19. N. c cccO!RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$2 And third, delight over the whole experience trains the soul to enjoy the sight of real-world virtue. Politics, Book VIII; 1340a22-27. Therefore, on this view Pappas notes that catharsis is a clarification of emotion. This is the view held by L. Golden, R. Janko, and M.C. Nussbaum. Pappas states:3c ha aaa ac aca'U&RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$  Training emotions has nothing to do with releasing them. Training presupposes that the emotions are here to stay, and need to be calibrated to fit the real-world situations that call them forth& By rousing powerful emotions with a simpler train of events than life provides, tragedy teaches how fear and pity feel and where they are appropriate. That understanding forms part of the groundwork for ethical behavior, since Aristotle connect ethical behavior to well-trained emotions. Thus the clarification view helps harmonize Aristotle s aesthetic with his ethics (pg. 18).DDcV'RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$P Nevertheless, this view has a glaring difficulty. While this view offers contextual support to Aristotle s argument against Plato s view of art, music, and poetry, in Politics Book VIII, 1342a7-15, Aristotle refers to catharsis as a relief, something that makes the soul  settle down (pg. 18).H)caaxaW(LCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Pappas, others still (e.g., Gerald Else) contend that catharsis does not mean  purging of emotions or  clarification of emotions. Rather, than being a psychological word, this word is a literary, narratological term since coherent and significant plot structure is the goal of tragedy (pg. 19). This is a minority view. It has the advantage of looking in the Poetics for an argument about what literature knows and how it says it. pc9ccBccCcoBLCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Beardsley,  Professor Else, on the other hand, translates the passage as follows:  carrying to completion, through a course of events in involving pity and fear, the purification of those painful or fatal acts which have that quality. The purgation, in his reading, is a purification, and it is not something that takes place in the spectator at all, but something that takes place in the play. It is carried out by the plot itself, in virtue of the fact that the plot consists of events of a certain sort (Professor Else takes pathematon as tragic events, because pathos in later chapters means this) (pg. 65). rwc c ccc+c! LX*%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$1. Mimesis is natural to people from childhood (Poetics 1448b6) as opposed to Plato who saw image-making as a lower-level metaphysical perversion. Plato thought of mimesis two fold: as (a) impersonating and the (b)  mock up or production of a likeness of something. 2. Mimesis is a natural propensity and pleasant because it is a way of learning (Poetics 1448b13; cf. 1448b8) as opposed to Plato who wants knowledge to come in the form of universal statements, the highest sort of learning.f0cc'cccZ,%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$C3. Humans love to learn (Metaphysics I.1) and mimesis brings determination and simplification to learning as opposed to Plato who finds it to be denigrating to a virtuous education. Aristotle saw mimesis can involve representation, it is not mimicry nor counterfeiting. 4. Aristotle argues that mimesis takes action as its object thus, tragedy communicates authentically philosophical knowledge as opposed to Plato who argued that mimesis is passive since it either involves putting on the mask (drama) and impersonating or the production of a likeness of something (poetry). C  cc ccc2ccY+0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c@5. Aristotle takes mimesis as imitating nature because of its orderly and purposeful forms fine arts take on; these are productive purposes which are rational, consciously perceive by the mind of its maker (Metaphysics 7.7) as opposed to Plato who thought it displaced or even corrupted reason by arousing the non-rational part of the soul. 6. Only the mimetic arts have as their specific purpose to produce representations or fictional depictions of the world or reality. This is contrary to Plato because he saw mimesis as being an imitation of appearance, not reality. xUcc cfcc[.0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c2 Regarding the relationship between reality and the artwork, it is important to observe the following quote from Poetics 9:  Poetry is more philosophical and more serious than history, for it deals with universals, while history speaks of particulars. In other words, poetry is offering larger conceptions which structure human experience and understanding, bringing unity, wholeness, or completeness. pcpcc cc]/Third Word: Action.c p1. Thus, mimesis is active; mimesis communicates knowledge, it is not passive, inherently weak, corrupt, or based in ignorance. 2. Just as some consider photography as not being art because it is passive (Plato; Republic 596d), Aristotle considers mimesis to be an active process of selective presentation because of being a composer of plots, a drawer of lines, etc.>qccc^1Third Word: Action.c$ 3. Tragedy in poetry represents events and not passions just as painting is more a matter of line than of color (Poetics, 1450b2-3); 4. A good plot clearly represents an action; it restricts itself to a unified action, even if that involves differing characters and their development. In fact a tragedy imitates a complete action: a beginning, middle and an end (Poetics, 1450b26). The unity of ploy s derived from the fact that it is a single action. ccqccccSc_0Third Word: Action.c >5. The unity consists in the right connections among the parts of a plot. Each even follows the other  either by necessity or probably (Poetics 1451a13, 38; 1452a20). 6. Tragedy that represents action contains a general truth. 7. Composing, plot making, play writing, are constructions; this is something musicians, story tellers, poets, and story tellers do. Hence a plot is an object that gets constructed.   ccccc`2Third Word: Action.c$xPotential misreading of Plato: A. Some have argued that Plato s analogy of a mirror meant to capture not passive automatism, but superficiality. B. Plato may think that the perversity is misusing their talents to produce so little that is virtuous. C. Plato may have been concerned that characterization, not plot, was the problem of mimesis; to duplicate an appearance is the issue when you are strive for the universal form.  P Pcc cc cccpCThird Word: Action.c$ - Even if this is the case, the Poetics assert that plot supremacy over character establishes a defense of the arts. The causal principle makes the story plausible and contains the tragedy s general statement. Therefore, tragedy communicated knowledge.p  ac cac \-Fourth Word: Seriousness:The tragic character be good, serious, superior people (Poetics 1448a2; 1454a17).  These character s dignity and standing ensure the importance of what they undertake and undergo (pg. 22). Aristotle did not want tragedy to present meaningless suffering; tragic effect is  disgusting , Poetics 1452b36) where as appearance of purpose or order is  fine (Poetics 1452a6-10) (pg. 22-23).8cccc=ccca3Fourth Word: Seriousness:Associates bad consequences to a character s  hamartia (Poetics 1453a10) which simply means a mistake, error of judgment, foolishness, or self-deception in classical Greek. (pg. 23). It is not used as a defect of character but an action; the misfortune of heroes depends on what they do. Tragic plots have strong causal connects whereby it instructs the audience on morality; mimesis imparts knowledge (pg. 23). Luck is also involved; things may not turn out the way one necessarily hopes; this is the plight of the tragic hero does. Therefore, for Aristotle, there is  value in the seriousness of tragedy (pg. 23).#PP|PPzPPSP:cccc|cczccScc56Aristotle s View of Beauty:Aristotle uses  beauty (kalos) 19 times in Poetics as compliment for tragic plots, language, and character. Only once does Aristotle make  beauty a defining  criterion for tragedies, when he says they must be neither too long to surpass what the memory can hold, not too short to count as serious (Poetics 1451a4-15) (pg. 24). Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5) Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes: mPP{PccccZccccJc c3c c"ck?6Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5). Consider Aristotle s comment in Poetics 1450b35:  either a living creature of any structure made of parts, must have not only an orderly arrangement of these parts but a size which is not accidental-for beauty lies in size and arrangement&  z}PPP2c c/cccd66Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes:  Those who suppose, as the Pythagoreans and Speusippus do, that supreme beauty and goodness are not present in the beginning, because the beginnings both of plants and of animals are causes, but beauty and completeness are in the effects of these, are wrong in their opinion. For the seed comes from other individuals which are prior and complete, and the first thing is not seed but the complete being, e.g., we must say that before the seed there is a man,-not the man produced from the seed, but another from whom the seed is produced. LQP P%c cAc e86Aristotle s View of Beauty: Moreover, in Parts of Animals, 645a23-25, Aristotle relates beauty to design:  Absence of haphazard and conduciveness of everything to an end are to be found in nature s works in the highest degree, and the end for which those work are put together and produced is a form of the beautiful. So, while Aristotle s view of beauty may be vague, it is clear that he believed beauty to be objective; beauty is derived from the nature of the beautiful object; it is related to size and proportion; it is related to design.@ Pcccb4RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$XWhile Aristotle doesn t provide offer a robust account of philosophical aesthetics whereby he deals with the problems of defending aesthetic judgments, we are able to conclude the following: Aesthetics involves objective reality; it is cognitively perceived and can be imitated. Aesthetics is pedagogically valuable and serious. Beauty is a real property; He is an empiricist who believed all knowledge begins in the senses.nPXPP2PPaPccl>RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Aesthetics involves aesthetic experiences; he doesn t deny its impact on people. In fact, we take pleasure in imitation because it is a special case of learning. In fact, the unity of plot, etc. may be seen as an aesthetic predicate. Mimesis or imitation involves a special kind of representation: it is a matter of representing an object. It can be the art of imitating visual appearances by means of color and drawing or the art of imitating human actions by means of dance and song.:PPccqDRFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Mimesis in poetry, in order to have its impact, must involve a real understanding of human nature; for without this knowledge you can t have a very good play (Beardsley, 63). Therefore, psychological laws must be true one for dramatic development: Aristotle is a structural and textual critic because he analyzes aspects of structure, chiefly concerned with plot. If catharsis is seen as a structural concept rather than a psychological one, then this description of Aristotle is appropriate. One can also say he is textual critic because he is concerned with analysis at the verbal level: Rhetoric. :PbPcbcrERFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$Beardsley makes two comments that are most interesting to consider. First:  What Plato feared most as a bad example for Athenian youth was the suggestion that good men are unhappy and that bad men prosper. Aristotle s reply might be understood in this way: there is no need to have a moral censorship of plays, but only an aesthetic one. For the play about the good man who becomes unhappy or the bad man who becomes happy will simply not be a very good tragedy; other things being equal, morality and justice will coincide with aesthetic excellence (Aesthetics, pg. 67). ~LPPPLcc c ccm<RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$nAnd secondly, Monroe Beardsley observes:  When Aristotle inquires into the  nature of something& He asks: what is the nature of the poetic art? And the answer is both normative and descriptive. For it involves a set of categories that play a fundament role in all of his thinking: the  four causes, or four types of explanation (see Physics II, vii). These are not mentioned in the Poetics itself, but it is interesting that in the Metaphysics (V [ ], ii) when he distinguishes the four causes, his example of the  material cause is  the bronze of the statue ; the  formal cause is the pattern, or  formula of the essence ; the  efficient cause is the productive agent (e.g., the sculptor and his activity); the  final cause is  the end, i.e., that for the sake of which a thing is (trans. Ross) (pp. 55-56). *P PP*c[cc+c ccco c cpn=Final Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics: Four causes for the statue of Athena:,T.c$&c$ <PPcci: Postscript:4A.E. Taylor makes an interesting claim about the Poetics:  Poetics was meant to be a collection of rules by obeying which the craftsman might make sure of turning out a successful play. So far as Aristotle has a Philosophy of Fine Art at all, it forms part of his more general theory of education and must be looked for in the general discussion of the aims of education in his Politics. Aristotle, 20-21.L:a1Q  f7 Bibliography:)Aristotle, The Complete Works of Aristotle, rev. Oxford Translation, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 Vols. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984). Monroe Beardsley, Aesthetics: From Classical Greek to the Present: A Short History (Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1966). A Companion to Aesthetics (Malden, M.A.: Blackwell, 1992, 1995). Routledge Companion to Aesthetics, edited by Berys Gaut and Dominic McIver Lopes (London: Routledge, 2001). A.E. Taylor, Aristotle, 3rd edition (Toronto, Ontario: General Publishing 1955). PPPPBPPmPPTP ccncccBc7ccBcc!cLcc c cck8cc,rґxqs1( sL/ 0|DArial NarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"DArialNarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ" DImpactarrowanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ"0DTimes New RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ@DBatangew RomanLL -Ԗb0Ԗ B0.  @n?" dd@  @@`` p2 !"#$%&'(*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDFGHIJK_b$`B;;˃ i;b$M,E?;f*3i;b$ ە/+h;K_nR$(];軞Dҧ+sR$ϱqtHJV _ َ 0AA@8,5 g4BdBdDhb0^ppp@ ʚ;ʚ;<4ddddh0:___PPT10DBatangew RomanLLpb0pDTimes New RomanLLpb0p 0<"___PPT9QnG^er4+o dHW2PNG  IHDR asRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<3PLTE3̙3̙ff33fff̙f3ff3fff3ff34o cmPPJCmp0712]IDAT0?O[Iq?۶3m・ے`ۖɩ);uȴ)~1d?C,j2lˌOIENDB`}ns+Sqރ/TpGPNG  IHDR sRGBgAMA7 cHRMz&u0`:pQ<6PLTE333f3ff3fff3f33fff3f3 cmPPJCmp07128kIDAT( j0ڴً\O YCHA0VᤰTgTPѩꝮ|;]y/n&2,${DI?"& Tpm c ccQ"BCatharsis:  release of emotion : This idea of  release of emotion has been the traditional interpretation. Consider the following translation:  Some persons fall into a religious frenzy, and we see them restored as a result of the sacred melodies-when they used the melodies that excite the soul to mystic frenzy-as though they had found healing [medical treatment] and purgation [katharsis]. Those who are influenced by pity or fear, and every emotional nature, must have a like experience, and others in so far as each is susceptible to such emotions, and all are in a manner purged and their souls lightened and delighted. The melodies which purge the passion likewise give an innocent pleasure to mankind. Politics, Book VIII, 1342.6-15.`Zqcc<ccca dN fCatharsis: 3 Reasons Against  Release of emotion :44c First, we know from Aristotle s ethics that he does not call for the  celebration or the  suppression of emotions; he argues for the  regular and  well ordered expressions (pg. 18). In the Nicomachean Ethics (Book II 1103b18) Aristotle states: c Hc c c c"cccccc(cc cR$bCatharsis: Reasons Against  Release of emotion :22c   This, then, is the case with the excellences also; by doing the acts that we do in our transactions with other men we become just or just, and by doing the acts that we do in the presence of danger, and being habituated to feel fear or confidence, we become brave or cowardly. The same is true of appetites and feelings of anger; some men become temperate and good-tempered, others self-indulgent and irascible, by behaving in one way or the other in the appropriate circumstances. Thus, in one word, states arise out of like activities. This is why the activities we exhibit must be a certain kind; it is because the states correspond to the differences between these. It makes no small difference, then, whether we form habits of one kind or of another from our very youth; it makes a very great difference, or rather all the difference. ,Pc OcS#dCatharsis: 3 reasons against  Release of Emotion 33  Second, music and poetry  educates our emotions because songs contain images of anger, courage and other traits (Politics, Book VIII, 1340a-1921. Consider the following excerpt:  Since then music is a pleasure, and excellence consists in rejoicing and loving and hating rightly, there is clearly nothing which we are so much concerned to acquire and to cultivate as the power of forming right judgments, and of taking delight in good dispositions and noble actions. Rhythm and melody supply imitations of anger and gentleness, and also of courage and temperance, and of all the qualities contrary to these, and of the other qualities of character, which hardly fall short of the actual affections, as we know from our own experience, for in listening to such strains our souls undergo a change. Politics, Book VIII, 1340a14-22. DZc rcc:cclcccT%#Catharsis: Another Interpretation:$$(Z Aristotle later states:  Enough has been said to show that music has a power of forming the character, and should therefore be introduced into the education of the young. The study is suited to the stage of youth, for young persons will not, if they can help, endure anything which is not sweetened by pleasure, and music has a natural sweetness. There seems to be in us a sort of affinity to musical modes and rhythms, which makes some philosophers say that a soul is a harmony, others, that is possesses harmony. Politics, Book VIII, 1340b 11-19. N. c cccO!RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$2 And third, delight over the whole experience trains the soul to enjoy the sight of real-world virtue. Politics, Book VIII; 1340a22-27. Therefore, on this view Pappas notes that catharsis is a clarification of emotion. This is the view held by L. Golden, R. Janko, and M.C. Nussbaum. Pappas states:3c ha aaa ac aca'U&RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$  Training emotions has nothing to do with releasing them. Training presupposes that the emotions are here to stay, and need to be calibrated to fit the real-world situations that call them forth& By rousing powerful emotions with a simpler train of events than life provides, tragedy teaches how fear and pity feel and where they are appropriate. That understanding forms part of the groundwork for ethical behavior, since Aristotle connect ethical behavior to well-trained emotions. Thus the clarification view helps harmonize Aristotle s aesthetic with his ethics (pg. 18).DDcV'RCatharsis is  clarification of emotions :**c$P Nevertheless, this view has a glaring difficulty. While this view offers contextual support to Aristotle s argument against Plato s view of art, music, and poetry, in Politics Book VIII, 1342a7-15, Aristotle refers to catharsis as a relief, something that makes the soul  settle down (pg. 18).H)caaxaW(LCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Pappas, others still (e.g., Gerald Else) contend that catharsis does not mean  purging of emotions or  clarification of emotions. Rather, than being a psychological word, this word is a literary, narratological term since coherent and significant plot structure is the goal of tragedy (pg. 19). This is a minority view. It has the advantage of looking in the Poetics for an argument about what literature knows and how it says it. pc9ccBccCcoBLCatharsis is  incidents in the drama. ''c$ According to Beardsley,  Professor Else, on the other hand, translates the passage as follows:  carrying to completion, through a course of events in involving pity and fear, the purification of those painful or fatal acts which have that quality. The purgation, in his reading, is a purification, and it is not something that takes place in the spectator at all, but something that takes place in the play. It is carried out by the plot itself, in virtue of the fact that the plot consists of events of a certain sort (Professor Else takes pathematon as tragic events, because pathos in later chapters means this) (pg. 65). rwc c ccc+c! LX*%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$1. Mimesis is natural to people from childhood (Poetics 1448b6) as opposed to Plato who saw image-making as a lower-level metaphysical perversion. Plato thought of mimesis two fold: as (a) impersonating and the (b)  mock up or production of a likeness of something. 2. Mimesis is a natural propensity and pleasant because it is a way of learning (Poetics 1448b13; cf. 1448b8) as opposed to Plato who wants knowledge to come in the form of universal statements, the highest sort of learning.f0cc'cccZ,%Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making.&&c$C3. Humans love to learn (Metaphysics I.1) and mimesis brings determination and simplification to learning as opposed to Plato who finds it to be denigrating to a virtuous education. Aristotle saw mimesis can involve representation, it is not mimicry nor counterfeiting. 4. Aristotle argues that mimesis takes action as its object thus, tragedy communicates authentically philosophical knowledge as opposed to Plato who argued that mimesis is passive since it either involves putting on the mask (drama) and impersonating or the production of a likeness of something (poetry). C  cc ccc2ccY+0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c@5. Aristotle takes mimesis as imitating nature because of its orderly and purposeful forms fine arts take on; these are productive purposes which are rational, consciously perceive by the mind of its maker (Metaphysics 7.7) as opposed to Plato who thought it displaced or even corrupted reason by arousing the non-rational part of the soul. 6. Only the mimetic arts have as their specific purpose to produce representations or fictional depictions of the world or reality. This is contrary to Plato because he saw mimesis as being an imitation of appearance, not reality. xUcc cfcc[.0Second Word: Mimesis = Image-Making of Reality.11c2 Regarding the relationship between reality and the artwork, it is important to observe the following quote from Poetics 9:  Poetry is more philosophical and more serious than history, for it deals with universals, while history speaks of particulars. In other words, poetry is offering larger conceptions which structure human experience and understanding, bringing unity, wholeness, or completeness. pcpcc cc]/Third Word: Action.c p1. Thus, mimesis is active; mimesis communicates knowledge, it is not passive, inherently weak, corrupt, or based in ignorance. 2. Just as some consider photography as not being art because it is passive (Plato; Republic 596d), Aristotle considers mimesis to be an active process of selective presentation because of being a composer of plots, a drawer of lines, etc.>qccc^1Third Word: Action.c$ 3. Tragedy in poetry represents events and not passions just as painting is more a matter of line than of color (Poetics, 1450b2-3); 4. A good plot clearly represents an action; it restricts itself to a unified action, even if that involves differing characters and their development. In fact a tragedy imitates a complete action: a beginning, middle and an end (Poetics, 1450b26). The unity of ploy s derived from the fact that it is a single action.ccqccccSc_0Third Word: Action.c >5. The unity consists in the right connections among the parts of a plot. Each even follows the other  either by necessity or probably (Poetics 1451a13, 38; 1452a20). 6. Tragedy that represents action contains a general truth. 7. Composing, plot making, play writing, are constructions; this is something musicians, story tellers, poets, and story tellers do. Hence a plot is an object that gets constructed. >ccc`2Third Word: Action.c$xPotential misreading of Plato: A. Some have argued that Plato s analogy of a mirror meant to capture not passive automatism, but superficiality. B. Plato may think that the perversity is misusing their talents to produce so little that is virtuous. C. Plato may have been concerned that characterization, not plot, was the problem of mimesis; to duplicate an appearance is the issue when you are strive for the universal form. PPcc cc cccpCThird Word: Action.c$ - Even if this is the case, the Poetics assert that plot supremacy over character establishes a defense of the arts. The causal principle makes the story plausible and contains the tragedy s general statement. Therefore, tragedy communicated knowledge.hac cac \-Fourth Word: Seriousness:The tragic character be good, serious, superior people (Poetics 1448a2; 1454a17).  These character s dignity and standing ensure the importance of what they undertake and undergo (pg. 22). Aristotle did not want tragedy to present meaningless suffering; tragic effect is  disgusting , Poetics 1452b36) where as appearance of purpose or order is  fine (Poetics 1452a6-10) (pg. 22-23).8cccc=ccca3Fourth Word: Seriousness:Associates bad consequences to a character s  hamartia (Poetics 1453a10) which simply means a mistake, error of judgment, foolishness, or self-deception in classical Greek. (pg. 23). It is not used as a defect of character but an action; the misfortune of heroes depends on what they do. Tragic plots have strong causal connects whereby it instructs the audience on morality; mimesis imparts knowledge (pg. 23). Luck is also involved; things may not turn out the way one necessarily hopes; this is the plight of the tragic hero does. Therefore, for Aristotle, there is  value in the seriousness of tragedy (pg. 23).#PP|PPzPPSP:cccc|cczccScc56Aristotle s View of Beauty:Aristotle uses  beauty (kalos) 19 times in Poetics as compliment for tragic plots, language, and character. Only once does Aristotle make  beauty a defining  criterion for tragedies, when he says they must be neither too long to surpass what the memory can hold, not too short to count as serious (Poetics 1451a4-15) (pg. 24). Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5) Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes: mPP{PccccZccccJc c3c c"ck?6Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is defined in terms of size or proportion (Metaphysics 1078a31-b5). Consider Aristotle s comment in Poetics 1450b35:  either a living creature of any structure made of parts, must have not only an orderly arrangement of these parts but a size which is not accidental-for beauty lies in size and arrangement&  z}PPP2c c/cccd66Aristotle s View of Beauty:Beauty is a real property of things (Metaphysics 1072b32-35). Aristotle writes:  Those who suppose, as the Pythagoreans and Speusippus do, that supreme beauty and goodness are not present in the beginning, because the beginnings both of plants and of animals are causes, but beauty and completeness are in the effects of these, are wrong in their opinion. For the seed comes from other individuals which are prior and complete, and the first thing is not seed but the complete being, e.g., we must say that before the seed there is a man,-not the man produced from the seed, but another from whom the seed is produced. LQP P%c cAc e86Aristotle s View of Beauty: Moreover, in Parts of Animals, 645a23-25, Aristotle relates beauty to design:  Absence of haphazard and conduciveness of everything to an end are to be found in nature s works in the highest degree, and the end for which those work are put together and produced is a form of the beautiful. So, while Aristotle s view of beauty may be vague, it is clear that he believed beauty to be objective; beauty is derived from the nature of the beautiful object; it is related to size and proportion; it is related to design.@ Pcccb4RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$XWhile Aristotle doesn t provide offer a robust account of philosophical aesthetics whereby he deals with the problems of defending aesthetic judgments, we are able to conclude the following: Aesthetics involves objective reality; it is cognitively perceived and can be imitated. Aesthetics is pedagogically valuable and serious. Beauty is a real property; He is an empiricist who believed all knowledge begins in the senses.nPXPP2PPaPccl>RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Aesthetics involves aesthetic experiences; he doesn t deny its impact on people. In fact, we take pleasure in imitation because it is a special case of learning. In fact, the unity of plot, etc. may be seen as an aesthetic predicate. Mimesis or imitation involves a special kind of representation: it is a matter of representing an object. It can be the art of imitating visual appearances by means of color and drawing or the art of imitating human actions by means of dance and song.:PPccqDRFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$ Mimesis in poetry, in order to have its impact, must involve a real understanding of human nature; for without this knowledge you can t have a very good play (Beardsley, 63). Therefore, psychological laws must be true one for dramatic development: Aristotle is a structural and textual critic because he analyzes aspects of structure, chiefly concerned with plot. If catharsis is seen as a structural concept rather than a psychological one, then this description of Aristotle is appropriate. One can also say he is textual critic because he is concerned with analysis at the verbal level: Rhetoric. :PbPcbcrERFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$Beardsley makes two comments that are most interesting to consider. First:  What Plato feared most as a bad example for Athenian youth was the suggestion that good men are unhappy and that bad men prosper. Aristotle s reply might be understood in this way: there is no need to have a moral censorship of plays, but only an aesthetic one. For the play about the good man who becomes unhappy or the bad man who becomes happy will simply not be a very good tragedy; other things being equal, morality and justice will coincide with aesthetic excellence (Aesthetics, pg. 67). ~LPPPLcc c ccm<RFinal Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics:**c$nAnd secondly, Monroe Beardsley observes:  When Aristotle inquires into the  nature of something& He asks: what is the nature of the poetic art? And the answer is both normative and descriptive. For it involves a set of categories that play a fundament role in all of his thinking: the  four causes, or four types of explanation (see Physics II, vii). These are not mentioned in the Poetics itself, but it is interesting that in the Metaphysics (V [ ], ii) when he distinguishes the four causes, his example of the  material cause is  the bronze of the statue ; the  formal cause is the pattern, or  formula of the essence ; the  efficient cause is the productive agent (e.g., the sculptor and his activity); the  final cause is  the end, i.e., that for the sake of which a thing is (trans. Ross) (pp. 55-56). *P PP*c[cc+c ccco c cpn=Final Thoughts on Aristotle s Aesthetics: Four causes for the statue of Athena:,T.c$&c$ <PPcci: Postscript:4A.E. Taylor makes an interesting claim about the Poetics:  Poetics was meant to be a collection of rules by obeying which the craftsman might make sure of turning out a successful play. So far as Aristotle has a Philosophy of Fine Art at all, it forms part of his more general theory of education and must be looked for in the general discussion of the aims of education in his Politics. Aristotle, 20-21.L:a1Q  f7 Bibliography:)Aristotle, The Complete Works of Aristotle, rev. Oxford Translation, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 Vols. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984). Monroe Beardsley, Aesthetics: From Classical Greek to the Present: A Short History (Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 1966). A Companion to Aesthetics (Malden, M.A.: Blackwell, 1992, 1995). Routledge Companion to Aesthetics, edited by Berys Gaut and Dominic McIver Lopes (London: Routledge, 2001). A.E. Taylor, Aristotle, 3rd edition (Toronto, Ontario: General Publishing 1955). PPPPBPPmPPTP ccncccBc7ccBcc!cLcc c cck8cc,0 0  0(   x   c $x    x   c $ǛP  H   0޽h ? ___,,B̙f80___PPT10.Yn`:drqJQqSs1Root EntrydO)Po@ PicturesvCurrent User)JSummaryInformation(hU?      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~+      !"#$%&'()*,-./0123456789:ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~  !"#$%&'(*,+ Fonts UsedDesign Template &_SShockley, PaulShockley,Slide Titles/X 8@ _TemplateIDTC010689751033 Paul