| Croce's Distinctions in the Aesthetic
														
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 Benedetto Croce's aesthetic system is based on
  distinctions, where art is compared and carefully contrasted to multiple other
  realms: that of logic, history, economics, physics, mathematics, morality,
  religion, politics, truth, sensation, pleasure, emotion... Art is not
  any of these things, art is art, and for this Croce's doctrine has been called
  "tautological", giving definitions of art mainly through negations. I think
  that Croce's aesthetic theory goes much deeper than being merely
  "tautological":
  Aesthetics for Croce is the philosophical science of art,
  and the aesthetician has to answer the question what art is, to reveal the
  true nature of art and its real roots in human nature. Croce holds that
  negations are relations after all, and that by defining what art is not, by
  seeing its connections, we arrive closer to the truth of art's essential
  nature: art is an intuition. What is intuition, then, for
  Croce?
 Croce contrasts intuition to the instinctive grasp of
  truth, and to the knowing of some higher domain of being. Intuition is the
  lowest, and the most basic step of mental activity, it is an inner vision of
  an image, it is immediate knowledge, obtained through the imagination of the
  individual thing in its concrete dimension. The effect of the arts-work is an
  intuition. Intuition is not a sensation, but an association of
  sensations, where association is neither memory nor flux of sensations, but a
  productive association, a synthesis, a spiritual activity. Every true
  intuition (or representation) is also expression. Expression is an inseparable
  part of intuition, because how can we possess an intuition of something (a
  figure, for example), unless we possess an accurate image of it? Intuitive
  activity, for Croce, therefore, possesses intuitions to the extent that it
  expresses them, which includes nonverbal expressions (line, color, sound).
  Impressions by means of words (or expression in general) pass from the obscure
  realm of the soul into the clarity of the contemplative spirit, and intuition
  cannot be distinguished from expression in the cognitive process, they appear
  simultaneously, because they are two, not one. And if thoughts seem to vanish
  in the act of expressing them, the reason is that they really did not exist,
  holds Croce. (But is it not exactly the opposite, I would like to ask here:
  the deeper the feeling or thought at the "core" of our being, the more
  impossible it is for us to express it? Or, as more elegantly put by Lacan: "I
  always say the truth. But not the entire truth, because there is no way to
  express the entire. To express the entire truth is materially impossible:
  words do not permit it. And in spite of this, it is precisely by the virtue of
  this impossibility that the truth is connected with reality". Or, again, in
  other words: how can we talk about the "essence" of things, or any thing, if
  we are agonizingly at the "existence" level, viewing the "inside", not the
  "outside". Or, again, may there be a realm of merging, where there is no rigid
  distinction between "inside" and "outside"?) For Croce we intuit the world in
  little expressions, they are the words we say to ourselves, our silent
  judgements: "Here is this, and I like it"; they gradually expand with the
  increasing spiritual concentration of certain moments.
 
 From slight intuitions (as an index, or a label are), we
  move on to greater intuitions, the thing or the object itself, and still
  onwards to the greatest and most lofty intuitions, such as an artist would
  have. This way for Croce the painter is a painter, because he operates at a
  level inconceivable for others, because he sees what others only feel vaguely
  or catch a glimpse of, but do not see ("One paints, not with the hands, but
  with the brain", Leonardo). Intuitions are unique, no two works of art are the
  same, but what similar there is, it is all our actual patrimony of intuitions.
  Everything else is only impressions, sensations, feelings, impulses, emotions
  ... or what still falls short of the spirit and is not assimilated by man,
  something postulated for the convenience of exposition, and otherwise
  non-existent, because to exist, holds Croce, also is a fact of the spirit. The
  real work of art is not something outwardly present, existing "objectively" in
  the outside world, a physical fact. Because when we analyze the physical fact,
  it turns out to be a scientific abstraction, while art is immediate, concrete,
  and not permitting analysis. The beautiful cannot be measured, counted,
  dissected, reduced, because beauty is something internal, impressions and
  feelings, fused into an image of contemplation, beauty is the inner
  expression (or form). And again, art is not a technique, but an intuition.
  Thus, intuitive knowledge is expressive knowledge, independent to intellectual
  function, indifferent to reality/unreality, to formations and apperceptions of
  space and time. Intuition is form , to be distinguished from
  the felt, the suffered, from the flux and wave of sensation, or from psychic
  matter. This form, taking possession, is expression.
 
 Art is not a meta-intuition, at the same time, states
  Croce, art is an expression of impressions, and not an expression of
  expression. Art is a collection of wide and complex intuitions of sensations
  and impressions, which are different from everyday ordinary impressions. This
  difference is only extensive, not intensive, it is spread onto wider fields,
  but does not differ in method from ordinary intuitions. The artists have a
  greater aptitude, a more frequent inclination fully to express the complex
  states of their soul. The limits of art are empirical and impossible to
  define, because if an epigram is art, why not a word? If a story, why not the
  jottings of a journalist? The answer for Croce is that the artistic genius
  possesses more quantitative signification. There is an identity of nature
  between the great artist's imagination and ours, because how otherwise would
  we understand the revelations of the genius, unless the difference between us
  is only one of quantity? And another characteristic of the intuitive
  (artistic) genius: it is conscious, as every form of human activity, it is not
  a blind mechanism. On the other hand it is not reflective
  consciousness, the super added consciousness of a critic or a historian. One
  of the most discussed questions of aesthetics is the relation between matter
  and form, or form and content, and their relation. Problems are created, Croce
  writes, in as far as words signify different things, but if we take that
  matter is emotionally elaborated, or that it is impressions, and form is an
  intellectual activity and expression, then our view cannot be doubted. The
  aesthetic fact is not content alone (i.e. not just simple impressions), it is
  a junction between form and content, it is impressions formed by expressive
  activity. Therefore, the aesthetic fact is form and nothing
  but form. But from this does not follow that the content is something
  superfluous (as it is in a theory of "pure formalism", such as Clive Bell's),
  because the content is the necessary point of departure for the
  expressive fact. What is important here is that there is no passage from the
  qualities of the content to those of the form. But impression and expression
  are not the same thing, and though it is the content that is transformable
  into a form, we know nothing about it until the transformation takes place. It
  does not become an aesthetic content before, but only after it has been
  actually transformed, it has no determinate qualities until transformation
  takes place (I would like to note that this argument seems somewhat like
  Parmenides' view that there can exist no change, because what is does not have
  to become in order to be, since it already is; and what is not cannot give
  being to what is, because it is not. The definite distinction here needs a
  more Aristotelian approach, maybe an explanation of how the process takes
  place gradually).
 
 Imitations, illusions, hallucinations are not aesthetic
  intuitions for Croce, because the first is just a mechanical reproduction of
  life, and the other two have nothing to do with the calm domain of the
  aesthetic (But is that so, it seems to be important somehow to ask? Is the
  domain of the aesthetic forever calm? Is Picasso's "Guernica" or Goya's "black
  period" calm? And even if so - calm in what sense?). Then, intuition is not to
  be confused with a state of idle passive awareness or daydreaming: it is an
  active, creative expression of imagination, although "intuition" is described
  by other concepts - that of representation, contemplation, impression, which
  may be interpreted to have a passive nuance. But intuition is not the
  mechanical functioning of the fancy. Intuition is a cognitive, yet emotive
  expression of the human spirit, although sometimes Croce emphasizes the
  intuition in the impression, and not in the expression, although in the
  process of intuition they are described to be an organic unity. And,
  although cognitive, intuition is not a concept, as those concepts (or
  generalizations) philosophy and science deal with. Art and history comprise
  particular objects and unique individuals: things like a table, a chair, a
  tree are unique and particular representations, they cannot be deduced from a
  general concept, though later on Croce distinguishes further between "the
  individual", as belonging to the realm of the historical investigation, and
  the "particular", described as the object of intuition. Particular
  representations are opposed to the conceptual reasoning of logic, for example,
  or philosophy. The intuition of particular images is not something "inferior"
  for Croce, but remains autonomous, in the sense that it does not depend on
  other types of cognition. Then, by virtue of its creative nature, Croce sees
  art as more extensive than history , the outside world in art
  not belonging neither to the real, nor to the false, but to the realm of
  the possible, whereas history deals with narrating what has already
  happened.
 
 I would like to note here that history, similarly to art,
  can be viewed as a creation , as a process, which turns facts into fiction, a
  process whereby the past is transformed and experienced again in a "new" sense
  of "reality", a psychological reality. The depths of the historical image
could be said to be "real", but not in the empirical sense of the word,
  and not "unreal" in the sense of illusion either. The depths
  of the image are surreal, in the sense of Andre Breton (i.e., in short,
  everything leads us to believe, that there exists a domain in the spiritual
  space, where life and death, the future and the past, the communicative and
  the non-communicative, the high and the low cease to be seen as
  contradictory). The story that is experienced, is not just a transformation
  of history into story, of facts into fiction, of knowledge into belief.
  Reflecting the events of the world, we are forced to poeticize the past,
  turning it into a poetic history, and the creation of the past can be seen as
  being very similar to the process of creation in art.
 
 Croce's theory of intuition is closely related to
  literature, history and theory. The question whether history is art or science
  was one of the frequently debated questions at the beginning of the XIX
  century. In spite of the pointed out by Croce difference between art and
  history , it seems that he did not set altogether a further distinction
  between them: intuition is described as both - the subject of historical
  judgment, and as art. Intuition conditions as the unique impressions and
  expressions of particular feelings, formed the object matter of art and of
  history, and are differentiated by the aesthetician from the universals and
  general rules of the sciences. Intuition seen as the unity of the perception
  of the real and of the simple image of the possible makes it quite impossible
  to distinguish between art and history. In "Aesthetic" (1953, p.28) Croce does
  point out: "Only at a later stage does the spirit form the concepts of
  external and internal, of what has happened and what is desired, of object and
  subject, and the like : only at this later stage, that is, does it distinguish
  historical from non-historical intuition, the real from the
  unreal, real imagination from pure imagination." All the same, Croce
  still sees that he has not set a clear division line between history and
  philosophy on the one hand, and art, as pure intuition, on the other. Thus,
  intuitions can become concepts, and concepts - intuitions, until it becomes
  impossible to distinguish between reality and fantasy: " Where this is not
  possible, where the delicate and fleeting shades between the real and unreal
  intuitions are so slight as to mingle the one with the other, we must either
  renounce for the time being at least the knowledge of what really happened
  (and this we often do), or we must fall back upon conjecture, verisimilitude,
  probability." ("Aesthetic", 1953, p.29.) For Croce history, unlike the
  sciences, does not construct the concepts of the real and the unreal, but
  makes use of them, and is to be distinguished from the theory of
  history.
In "Aesthetic" intuition is distinguished further as
  form from "what is felt and suffered, or from the psychic matter; and
  this form, taking possession, is expression. To intuit is to express." And
  this expression is immediate, without being subsumed under the forms of
  space and time, and without the application of concepts. But how does ordinary
  intuition distinguish from intuition, that is art? The intuition, which is
  art, has a certain complexity of expression, not present in the everyday
  representation of it:
 
 "The intuition of the simplest popular love-song,
  which says the same thing, or very nearly, as any declaration of love that
  issues at every moment from the lips of thousands of ordinary men, may be
  intensively perfect in its poor simplicity, although it be extensively so much
  more limited than the complex intuition of a love-song by Leopardi."
  ("Aesthetics", 1953, p.13.)
 
 The intuition that is art and the
  everyday expression is a matter of degree (or quantity) and cannot be
  determined beforehand. Everyday intuitions, according to Croce, are not as
  complex as the art-intuitions, but can be as perfect as the complicated
  expressions of art.
The simple intuition has a theoretic character, though
  being quite distinct from intellectual knowledge (as it is distinct from
  perception of the real, being more simple). Therefore, art is knowledge, form,
  though it does not belong to the realm of feeling, or the psychic. And if art
  is defined sometimes as "appearance" (Schein), it is to be distinguished from
  that more complex fact of perception, by maintaining its pure
  intuitiveness (i.e. reality in its ingenuousness and immediacy in the
  vital impulse, again - in its feeling). Aesthetic expression is synthesis, in
  which it is impossible to distinguish direct and indirect. All impressions are
  placed by it on a level, in so far as they are aestheticized. The person who
  absorbs the art-work will have it before him in a series of impressions, some
  of which have prerogatives and precedence over the others, but he knows
  nothing of what has happened prior to having absorbed it, the same way
  as distinctions made after reflection have nothing to do with art as
  such. The theory of aesthetic senses fails to distinguish expression from
  impression, and form from matter; but it goes wrong when attempting to
  establish what physiological organs are necessary for the aesthetic fact as
  well. Expression knows nothing about physiological facts. Expression's genesis
  is in the impressions, and the physiological path by which they have found
  their way into the mind is of no importance. Of course, the man born blind
  cannot intuit and express light. But the impressions are not dependent only on
  the organ, but also on the stimuli which operate upon the organ . This,
  though, only repeats what we already know: the point of departure for
  expressions are impressions, and not the stimulus, or the organ, and every
  impression excludes other impressions during the moment in which it dominates;
  the same holds for every expression.
Another typical characteristic of the art-work for Croce
  is its unity and indivisibility: every expression is a single
  expression:
 
 "Another corollary of the conception of expression
  as activity is the indivisibility of the work of art. Every
  expression is a single expression. Activity is a fusion of the impressions in
  an organic whole. A desire to express this has always prompted the affirmation
  that the work of art should have unity, or, what amounts to the same
  thing, unity in variety. Expression is a synthesis of the
  various, or multiple, in the one." ("Aesthetic", 1953, p.20.)
 
 Activity is a fusion of the
  impressions in an organic whole, and expression is a synthesis of the various,
  or multiple, in one, a unity of the variety. Any division into parts, scenes,
  episodes, etc. annihilates the work, as dividing an organism into heart,
  brain, nerves, etc. Sometimes an expression arises from other expressions:
  there are simple and there are compound expressions. There is a difference
  between the eureka, with which Archimedes expressed all his joy at
  his discovery, and an expressive act of a regular tragedy.
 Art is liberating and purifying for Croce. By elaborating
  his impressions man frees himself from them. By objectifying them, he removes
  them from him and makes himself their superior. That is the reason why artists
  possess both: maximum of sensibility or passion, and maximum of insensibility
  or Olympian serenity. The two are compatible, for they do not refer to the
  same object. The sensibility refers to the material, which the artist absorbs
  into himself, the insensibility - to the form, with which he dominates the
  tumult of the sensations and passions. Art is like the spirit of which it is a
  form, eternal and omnipresent.
What, then, is the spirit, of which Croce writes often in
  his "Aesthetic"? It is not a transcendent or a supernatural reality; it is the
  immanent conscious activity in its concrete dimension; it is the life of the
  mind, encompassing everything. Within the spirit no divisions are possible,
  though distinctions may be made: 
  THEORETICAL (manifests itself through thought) : AESTHETICS (knowledge of individuals by intuition)
			vs. LOGIC (knowledge of universals by concepts)
PRACTICAL (manifests itself through action): ECONOMICS (related to desiring  individual things)
			vs. ETHICS (related to willing of universal ends)
 This distinction of Croce gives us the four categories of
  being, in order to understand the whole domain of the spirit. It is also an
  indication of the basic concepts, determining the meaning and value of life
  itself - respectively the Beautiful, the True, the Useful, and the Good. These
  steps of being are organized into successive grades from aesthetics to logic,
  or from economics to ethics, because thought presupposes intuition and will
  follows desire. But everything in the spirit is synthetically related, fused
  in a unit, and each grade presupposes all of the others. Therefore art, as one
  of the grades of the spirit, cannot have types, sorts, variations, techniques,
  degrees and ends. That is why the categories of rhetoric (simple, ornate,
  proper, metaphorical), and the categories of the "pseudo-aesthetical" as well
  (tragic, comic, sublime, ridiculous), the artistic "technique", and all
  classifications of arts are dismissed from the realm of the aesthetical for
  Croce. Even the division "beautiful", referring to expression, and "ugly",
  referring to unsuccessful expression, is not really a positive thing in
  aesthetics, because it distracts us from understanding art as expression,
  because a beautiful work is a complete, perfect, fused unity,
  while an ugly work is an incompletely fused multiplicity. The absolutely
  beautiful is perfectly expressive for the aesthetician, but nothing is
  absolutely ugly, i.e. lacking any expression.
 The description of art in the "Aesthetic" in terms of
  complexity and organic unity of expression grows on to adding more
  characteristics to distinguish better everyday intuition from the artistic
  intuition in Croce's later works. One is the view of "the lyrical" or "pure"
  intuition : that in comparison with other kinds of cognition, intuition is the
  most simple and fundamental, that it does not include the concepts of
  historical narrative or the classifications of empirical sciences. The
  intuitive cognition should rather express images and bring concrete knowledge.
  The lyrical quality is seen in the life, the movement, the emotion of the
  artist, which is to help distinguish works of true art from false. And when
  emotion and feeling are present a lot can be forgiven; while if they lack -
  nothing can make up for that. A synonym of intuition, "lyricality", holds
  Croce, is a deeper understanding of aesthetic expression as feeling or
  emotion. Still another qualification of intuition follows lyricality in
  Croce's aesthetic system: art is defined as the expression of "cosmic
  totality". Art's essence is seen by Croce not in its apparent subject matter,
  but in depth and breadth of the artist's emotional expression, which would
  allow us (experiencing the art work) to move beyond the characteristics of our
  own limitations in time and space: towards the cosmic being in the great
  work's rhythm and in the variety of the new life that is born, expands, is
  extinguished and reborn, in order to grow and to be extinguished
  anew...
 
 Croce's aesthetic theory has been described by
  commentators as contradictory (aesthetic representation being viewed by Croce
  as both - particular and universal), it has been said that illogical
  expression in Croce's system came from what Croce himself called "category
  mistake" (the activities of consciousness - intuitional, conceptual, economic,
  and ethical - expressed concepts and to misapply or confuse them was a
  categorial error). Even from the short review of the major points in Croce's
  early aesthetic theory in this text, it is clear, I think, that Croce's
  distinctions, his categorial theory is an original contribution to philosophic
  thought. Croce is giving a classification and an explanation to what remains
  alive in the history of thought: far from being just a "negative statement"
  his theory of intuition specifies the unique character of art, as being
  separate in its "intuitive expression" from conceptual thought, and aesthetic
  appreciation as being distinct from intellectual understanding. And more - for
  Croce art is not just a display of emotions, and the aesthetic response is not
  a direct arousal of emotion (nor, of course, is it merely an intellectual
  interest), because there is a distinction between a real-life situation and an
  aesthetical one. Over intellectualizing and over emotionalizing both
  distorting the nature of the response to art.
 
 Maybe the most startling of Croce's ideas is the
  identification of artistic intuition with artistic expression, which does not
  account for the creative activity of the artist, who embodies the intuited
  ideas in his work with his skill and effort, and this is not purely an
  imaginative effort. Croce gives major importance to what is going on in the
  artist's mind, and although art is not craft, craft does play a role in it.
  Pleasure can be taken in recognizing the technical skill in an art-work, as
  well as in the expressed emotions. Expression is only one aspect of art, and
  similarly to Collingwood's aesthetic theory (briefly stated, for Collingwood
  art is expression at the level of "imagination", instead of "intuition", but
  again, expression is the criterion by which a work of art may be recognized),
  or even similarly to the simple theory of art of Tolstoy (for Tolstoy art is
  the contagion of feeling), Croce's theory underlines that the importance of an
  art-work is in its expressiveness - but, there is more than just
  expression even to the most expressive works. Separating the aesthetical
  emotion from all other emotions in life still remains somewhat unclear in
  Croce's attempt to set distinctions, and the aesthetical dimension, which
  should have its own special quality different from everything else still
  leaves unresolved issues, when it is described as "intuition" or "vision", and
  the artist - producing "images" or "dreams".
 BIBLIOGRAPHY:Benedetto Croce,Aesthetic as a Science of
  Expression and General Linguistic, translated by Douglas Ainslie, Peter
  Owen, London, 1953;
 Benedetto Croce, The Aesthetic as the Science
  of Expression and of the Linguistic in General , translated by Colin
  Lyas, Cambridge University Press, 1990;
 
 Benedetto Croce, An Autobiography ,
  translated by Oxford Clarendon Press, 1927;
 
 H.S.Harris,Benedetto Croce , The
  Encyclopedia of ed. P.Edwards, vol.I, Macmillan Publishing Co.,
  Inc.&The Free N.Y., London,1967;
 
 M.E.Moss, Benedetto Croce Reconsidered. Truth
  and Error in Theories of Art, Literature, and History , University Press
  of New England, Hanover, and London, 1987;
 
 G.N.G.Orsini, Benedetto Croce. Philosopher of
  Art and Literary Critic, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale,
  1961;
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