Is there a handy rule for determining which questions can be resolved with a correct answer, and which questions cannot? I get caught up in trying to answer questions like, "What is love?" and "Is justice a beneficial value?" No matter how satisfied I am with the answers I come up with, I find other people who offer equally satisfying answers from other perspectives.
For instance, I generally argue that artistic merit exists in the relationship between an audience and a man-made production. A statue of Adonis is just a statue of Adonis, but it becomes art when I see it and I am inspired by it in some way. One of my buddies hates this view of art. To him, artistic merit exists in the independent spirit of the artist, striving against conventions. So we both dig The Velvet Underground, The Beatles, and Miles Davis, but we cannot agree on James Taylor. He thinks Taylor's music is banal and devoid of artistic merit because it panders to a mainstream sensibility, whereas I find some of his albums to...
What a great question! Post world war two, the movement of positivism tried to shut down all questions that could not be resolved with empirical verification. This movement would have shelved questions about justice (positivists took a non-cognitive approach to ethics and assumed moral judgments were mere expressions of emotions that are neither true nor false) and questions about beauty and such. But the movement ran into serious problems in the late 1960s, early 1970s, self-destructing in some cases (as when positivists claimed that only empirically verifiable statements are meaningufl, even though their claim about meaning could not itself be empirically verified). Plus the questions about love, justice, art, and so on seem irrepressable. Two things you might consider: First, I suggest that some substantial terrain is of profound importance even if we lack the common tools to reach a consensus. Questions about the nature of justice and love seem to fit that category and I believe that even...
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