Plato's Republic
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Words: 1496
Pages: 5
(approximately 235 words/page)
Pages: 5
(approximately 235 words/page)
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What does Plato have against poets? In what sense may all art
(even music) be imitation?
Plato's belief was that art is fundamentally based on imitation. It
was this imitation which made art inferior, combined with the
unsuitable moral content of some art. Plato's condemnation of art is
seen by some as too rationalist and "depriving it of all its charms" (Otto
Apelt).
Modern objections to Plato's theory of art assert that he fails to
showed first 75 words of 1496 total
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showed first 75 words of 1496 total
showed last 75 words of 1496 total
no real creative element. As Verdenius puts it: "True art does not lapse into flat realism, but it strives to transcend the material world...in true art likeness does not refer to common-place reality, but to ideal Beauty." But the imitation lies on a lower level of reality than its subject -as Plato points out, the painter paints the superficial appearance and so "the art of representation is therefore a long way removed from truth."
no real creative element. As Verdenius puts it: "True art does not lapse into flat realism, but it strives to transcend the material world...in true art likeness does not refer to common-place reality, but to ideal Beauty." But the imitation lies on a lower level of reality than its subject -as Plato points out, the painter paints the superficial appearance and so "the art of representation is therefore a long way removed from truth."