Almost Every Work of Art is a Failure

Philosophical Topics (forthcoming)
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Abstract

It is a constitutive aim of a work of art to express a point of view, but points of view are only had by persons. From this it follows that all works of art aspire to personhood. If a work of art ever succeeded in this aspiration, it would have a profound kind of value, but it cannot, and so its value, at least with respect to this aim, can never be other than that of a noble failure.

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Kenneth Walden
Dartmouth College

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