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Leon Botstein: Art Now (Aesthetics Across Music, Painting, Architecture, Movies, and More.)

President Leon Botstein of Bard College steps boldly into the fray to answer one of the most enduring human questions: What is art? This discussion spills over into debates about art's value to society ---- whether access to the arts is right as basic as education or health care, and whether it should be assessed and supported by government or left to the "invisible hand" of the free market. President Botstein explains why it is essential to ask these questions and offers a sturdy basis for evaluating them. He goes so far as to suggest that engaging with art can give our lives meaning and purpose.

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How do consumers achieve self-affirmation when purchasing products?

How do consumers achieve self-affirmation when purchasing products? | Science News | Scoop.it

People who feel good about themselves are less likely to choose an attractive product than a functional one, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. But choosing highly aesthetic products may make people more open-minded.



More on SELF-ESTEEM: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=self-esteem


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Aesthetic appeal may have neurological link to contemplation and self-assessment

Aesthetic appeal may have neurological link to contemplation and self-assessment | Science News | Scoop.it
A network of brain regions which is activated during intense aesthetic experience overlaps with the brain network associated with inward contemplation and self-assessment, researchers have found.


Articles about NEUROSCIENCE: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=neuroscience

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The ugly truth: why beautiful wins in 2012

The ugly truth: why beautiful wins in 2012 | Science News | Scoop.it
Edward Aten of Swift.fm noticed a shift in priorities this year. Visual experiences are starting to become the gold standard of web success; the successful web companies of 2011 and beyond are just simply better looking.
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The Evolution of Aesthetics: The Origins Of Music And Visual Art

The Evolution of Aesthetics: The Origins Of Music And Visual Art | Science News | Scoop.it

One of the great mysteries of art is why it exists. Although our desire to create and enjoy art is so widespread that it appears as natural as eating or reproducing -– nearly every culture draws, dances, sings, recites poetry and tells stories -– the origins of human aesthetics are not clear-cut. What’s peculiar is that from a biological point of view art appears to serve no adaptive advantages whatsoever.

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Your Left Side Is More Eye-pleasing than Your Right

Your Left Side Is More Eye-pleasing than Your Right | Science News | Scoop.it
According to a new study, images of the left side of the human face are perceived as more pleasant than of the right side of the face.
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Google Glasses and Hacking a New Aesthetic

Google Glasses and Hacking a New Aesthetic | Science News | Scoop.it

By superimposing a digital reality over a physical world display, Google Glasses transform everyday life into a source of new digital information - everything from today's weather to upcoming events in your calendar. The Google Glasses are the clearest sign yet that our digital and real-world lives will inevitably collide together in the future -- there will no longer be a divide between our "online" and "offline" worlds.


Articles about AUGMENTED REALITY http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=Augmented%20Reality

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How the Brain Appreciates Art | IdeaFeed | Big Think

How the Brain Appreciates Art | IdeaFeed | Big Think | Science News | Scoop.it

Philosophers have long spoken of aesthetic appreciation as though it were a distinct faculty of the mind. On a certain level, it seems reasonable that we do not look at a burrito the same way we look at a Vermeer painting. But neuroimaging devices show that our approval or disapproval of something is processed by the same part of the brain. "The most reasonable evolutionary hypothesis is that the aesthetic system of the brain evolved first for the appraisal of objects of biological importance, including food sources and suitable mates, and was later co-opted for artworks such as paintings and music."

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