Summary: Researchers report distractions can detract from the experience of beauty, and sensuous pleasures can also be beautiful.

Source: Cell Press.

Does the experience of beauty require a person to think? And can sensuous pleasures, like eating or sex, be beautiful? Such questions have long preoccupied philosophers, with Immanuel Kant making the famous claim that beauty requires thought, unlike sensuous pleasure, which, he said, can never be beautiful. Now, researchers reporting in Current Biology on May 11 who have put these philosophical notions to the test in a series of psychological experiments say that Kant was right on one count and wrong on the other.

Their findings show that distractions do indeed detract from the experience of beauty. In other words, it takes thought to experience beauty when looking at a beautiful image. On the other hand, their evidence shows that sensuous pleasures also can be beautiful.

“We find that beauty, when it happens, is strongly pleasurable, and that strong pleasure is always beautiful,” says Denis Pelli at New York University. “Strong pleasure and beauty both require thought.”

To explore these philosophical theories in the new study, Pelli and Aenne Brielmann asked 62 people to indicate how much pleasure and beauty they felt while they saw an image, tasted a candy, or touched a soft teddy bear. The researchers showed each person many different images, some beautiful, some merely nice, and others neutral, like a chair in a furniture catalog. Participants then rated their experience of each object on a four-point beauty scale.

In another round of the same experiment, participants were asked to repeat what they’d done earlier, this time while they were distracted with a secondary task. In that task, participants heard a series of letters and were asked to press a button any time they heard the same letter they’d heard two letters before.

The researchers found that the experience of non-beautiful objects wasn’t changed by the distraction. But, distraction took away from the experience of beauty when a person was shown an image earlier deemed beautiful. In other words, Kant was right. Beauty does require thought.

However, contrary to Kant’s proposal that sensual pleasures can never be beautiful, about 30 percent of participants said they’d definitely experienced beauty after sucking on a candy or touching a soft teddy bear.

Surprised by that, the researchers decided to follow up. They asked some participants who had responded “definitely yes” for beauty on candy trials what they’d meant. As Brielmann and Pelli report, “most of them remarked that sucking candy had personal meaning for them, like a fond childhood memory. One participant replied, ‘Of course, anything can be beautiful.'”

“Our findings show that many other things besides art can be beautiful–even candy,” Brielmann says. “But for maximum pleasure, nothing beats undistracted beauty.”

The findings highlight the fact that beauty, subjective and ephemeral as it is, can still be measured and mathematically modelled, the researchers say. Such scientific explorations of beauty have practical application as well.

Image shows a person, a daffodil and a heart.
This iconographic depicts the saying that “Beauty requires thought.” NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Brielmann and Pelli.

“These are important insights for people who want to create beauty, such as artists or museum curators,” Brielmann adds. “You should, for example, not distract people in museums if you want them to find beauty in the art.”

The researchers plan to continue this line of investigation in hopes to answer questions about the role of beauty in our lives. For instance, they ask, “Are there people who cannot experience beauty? What role does beauty play in decision making? Is a sense of beauty necessary for creativity? And, is ugliness the opposite of beauty or is it a separate dimension?”

About this neuroscience research article

Source: Joseph Caputo – Cell Press
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is credited to Brielmann and Pelli.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Beauty Requires Thought” by Aenne A. Brielmann and Denis G. Pelli in Current Biology. Published online May 11 2017 doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.018

Cite This NeuroscienceNews.com Article

[cbtabs][cbtab title=”MLA”]Cell Press “Beauty Requires ThoughtIdentified.” NeuroscienceNews. NeuroscienceNews, 11 May 2017.
<https://neurosciencenews.com/thought-beauty-philosophy-6649/>.[/cbtab][cbtab title=”APA”]Cell Press (2017, May 11). Beauty Requires ThoughtIdentified. NeuroscienceNew. Retrieved May 11, 2017 from https://neurosciencenews.com/thought-beauty-philosophy-6649/[/cbtab][cbtab title=”Chicago”]Cell Press “Beauty Requires ThoughtIdentified.” https://neurosciencenews.com/thought-beauty-philosophy-6649/ (accessed May 11, 2017).[/cbtab][/cbtabs]


Abstract

Beauty Requires Thought

Highlights
•Beauty and strong pleasure require executive function; lesser pleasures do not
•Beauty increases linearly with pleasure
•Sensuous pleasures from taste and touch can occasionally be beautiful
•Strong pleasure is always beautiful, whether from beautiful or sensuous stimuli

Summary
The experience of beauty is a pleasure, but common sense and philosophy suggest that feeling beauty differs from sensuous pleasures such as eating or sex. Immanuel Kant claimed that experiencing beauty requires thought but that sensuous pleasure can be enjoyed without thought and cannot be beautiful. These venerable hypotheses persist in models of aesthetic processing but have never been tested. Here, participants continuously rated the pleasure felt from a nominally beautiful or non-beautiful stimulus and then judged whether they had experienced beauty. The stimuli, which engage various senses, included seeing images, tasting candy, and touching a teddy bear. The observer reported the feelings that the stimulus evoked. The time course of pleasure, across stimuli, is well-fit by a model with one free parameter: pleasure amplitude. Pleasure amplitude increases linearly with the feeling of beauty. To test Kant’s claim of a need for thought, we reduce cognitive capacity by adding a “two-back” task to distract the observer’s thoughts. The distraction greatly reduces the beauty and pleasure experienced from stimuli that otherwise produce strong pleasure and spares that of less-pleasant stimuli. We also find that strong pleasure is always beautiful, whether produced reliably by beautiful stimuli or just occasionally by sensuous stimuli. In sum, we confirm Kant’s claim that only the pleasure associated with feeling beauty requires thought and disprove his claim that sensuous pleasures cannot be beautiful.

“Beauty Requires Thought” by Aenne A. Brielmann and Denis G. Pelli in Current Biology. Published online May 11 2017 doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.018

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