Description

Book Synopsis

Natural Beauty was selected for the Choice Outstanding Academic Title list for 2008!

Natural Beauty presents a bold new philosophical account of the principles involved in making aesthetic judgments about natural objects. It surveys historical and modern accounts of natural beauty and weaves elements derived from those accounts into a “syncretic theory” that centers on key features of aesthetic experience—specifically, features that sustain and reward attention. In this way, Moore’s theory sets itself apart from both the purely cognitive and the purely emotive approaches that have dominated natural aesthetics until now. Natural Beauty shows why aesthetic appreciation of works of art and aesthetic appreciation of nature can be mutually reinforcing; that is, how they are cooperative rather than rival enterprises. Moore also makes a compelling case for how and why the experience of natural beauty can contribute to the larger project of living a good life.



Trade Review

“In 1992 Mothersill believed that philosophers had not yet done their best work on beauty. … Ronald Moore has answered Mothersill’s challenge with a book that draws its central ideas from the history of philosophy, from Plato and Aristotle through Hume and Kant, to John Dewey and Monroe Beardsley. Moore has engaged in conversation nearly every major Western philosopher on beauty in the writing of his book. The result is a tour de force on beauty that captures the best of the canon and thrusts research on the subject in a new direction. Natural Beauty: A Theory of Aesthetics Beyond the Arts may be the most important book on beauty since Kant, The Critique of Judgment.” — Dan Vaillancourt, Loyola University Chicago in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 66, Number 3, Summer 2008, pages 303-305

“Written in clear and elegant prose, this book is a welcome contribution to debates about beauty wherever we find it. Moore provides a refreshing reminder of what aesthetics can accomplish when it takes seriously both its history and the uniqueness of aesthetic experience.” — Jonathan Maskit, Denison University

Natural Beauty is a well-balanced, wonderfully written, systematic and thoroughly researched book. Moore’s positive theory is so well developed and original that this book should immediately become one of the most important books in nature aesthetics. And because it takes aim at the basic concepts of aesthetic judgment, aesthetic experience and aesthetic value, it will also have an impact on the wider field of aesthetics. A genuinely impressive performance.” — John Andrew Fisher, University of Colorado, Boulder

“In this wonderfully written book Ronald Moore provides a rigorous and historically informed syncretic account of environmental aesthetics that may free us from having to choose between scientific and emotive accounts of natural beauty. I cannot wait for the debates which will follow this engaging contribution.” — Andrew Light, Editor, Ethics, Place, and Environment

“Ron Moore’s rich and subtle defense of a syncretic aesthetics of nature advances the philosophical conversation about natural beauty while empowering ordinary appreciators to more confidently delight in nature and art.” — Stephanie Ross, University of Missouri St. Louis

“Moore has written a truly impressive book on the very compelling subject of natural beauty. He surveys the most prominent views on the subject and draws a line that both sythesizes and advances their competing claims. In Moore’s view, one’s appreciation of the beauty in artifacts informs an appreciation of the beauty in nature and vice versa. It is all good, as is this clearly written, cogently argued, well informed, informative book.” — J.M. Carvalho, Villanova University — in Choice



Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction

Chapter 1: Appreciating Nature as Natural

  • The Problem of Appreciation
    Glass Flowers
    Warhol and Blaschka

Chapter 2: Conceptualism and Non-conceptualism

  • Conceptualism and Its Problems
    Non-conceptualism and Its Problems
    Syncretic Aesthetics

Chapter 3: The Historical Roots of Syncretism: Early Developments

  • Ancient Views
    Medieval and Renaissance Views
    Early Modern Developments

Chapter 4: The Historical Roots of Syncretism: Modern Developments

  • Kant and the Subjective Turn
    Schopenhauer and the Aesthetic Attitude
    Recent Aesthetic Experience Theory
    Critical Responses to This Theory
    Where This Leaves Us

Chapter 5: Aesthetic Experience Revisited

  • Cold Plums
    Hunkered-down Aesthetic Experience
    Grains of Sand

Chapter 6: The Framing Paradox

  • Nature Unframed
    Nature Framed
    The Paradox and Its Resolution

Chapter 7: Syncretic Regard—Part I

  • Judges and “True Judges”
    The Natureworld
    Fundamental Elements in Judgments of Natural Beauty
    • Selective Sensory Focus
      Completeness Within Limits
      Savoring
      Letting Nature Be Nature
  • Typal and General Judgment

Chapter 8: Syncretic Regard—Part II

  • General Factors
    • Intensive Beauty
      Formal Beauty
      Formal Beauty and Formalism
      Connective Beauty
      Elaborative Imagination
  • Art and Nature
    • Reciprocity: Learning from Each Other
      Inhibition: Getting in Each Other’s Way

Chapter 9: Patterns of Appreciation and Aesthetic Development

  • Carlson’s Inventory
    The Place of Syncretic Theory
    Growing Up Aesthetically

Chapter 10: Theoretical Implications and Conclusion

  • Layers of Response
    Hard Questions
    Conclusion

References
Index

Natural Beauty: A Theory of Aesthetics Beyond the

    Product form

    £40.46

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £44.95 – you save £4.49 (9%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 13 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Ronald Moore

    1 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Natural Beauty: A Theory of Aesthetics Beyond the by Ronald Moore

      Publisher: Broadview Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/08/2007
      ISBN13: 9781551115030, 978-1551115030
      ISBN10: 1551115034

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Natural Beauty was selected for the Choice Outstanding Academic Title list for 2008!

      Natural Beauty presents a bold new philosophical account of the principles involved in making aesthetic judgments about natural objects. It surveys historical and modern accounts of natural beauty and weaves elements derived from those accounts into a “syncretic theory” that centers on key features of aesthetic experience—specifically, features that sustain and reward attention. In this way, Moore’s theory sets itself apart from both the purely cognitive and the purely emotive approaches that have dominated natural aesthetics until now. Natural Beauty shows why aesthetic appreciation of works of art and aesthetic appreciation of nature can be mutually reinforcing; that is, how they are cooperative rather than rival enterprises. Moore also makes a compelling case for how and why the experience of natural beauty can contribute to the larger project of living a good life.



      Trade Review

      “In 1992 Mothersill believed that philosophers had not yet done their best work on beauty. … Ronald Moore has answered Mothersill’s challenge with a book that draws its central ideas from the history of philosophy, from Plato and Aristotle through Hume and Kant, to John Dewey and Monroe Beardsley. Moore has engaged in conversation nearly every major Western philosopher on beauty in the writing of his book. The result is a tour de force on beauty that captures the best of the canon and thrusts research on the subject in a new direction. Natural Beauty: A Theory of Aesthetics Beyond the Arts may be the most important book on beauty since Kant, The Critique of Judgment.” — Dan Vaillancourt, Loyola University Chicago in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 66, Number 3, Summer 2008, pages 303-305

      “Written in clear and elegant prose, this book is a welcome contribution to debates about beauty wherever we find it. Moore provides a refreshing reminder of what aesthetics can accomplish when it takes seriously both its history and the uniqueness of aesthetic experience.” — Jonathan Maskit, Denison University

      Natural Beauty is a well-balanced, wonderfully written, systematic and thoroughly researched book. Moore’s positive theory is so well developed and original that this book should immediately become one of the most important books in nature aesthetics. And because it takes aim at the basic concepts of aesthetic judgment, aesthetic experience and aesthetic value, it will also have an impact on the wider field of aesthetics. A genuinely impressive performance.” — John Andrew Fisher, University of Colorado, Boulder

      “In this wonderfully written book Ronald Moore provides a rigorous and historically informed syncretic account of environmental aesthetics that may free us from having to choose between scientific and emotive accounts of natural beauty. I cannot wait for the debates which will follow this engaging contribution.” — Andrew Light, Editor, Ethics, Place, and Environment

      “Ron Moore’s rich and subtle defense of a syncretic aesthetics of nature advances the philosophical conversation about natural beauty while empowering ordinary appreciators to more confidently delight in nature and art.” — Stephanie Ross, University of Missouri St. Louis

      “Moore has written a truly impressive book on the very compelling subject of natural beauty. He surveys the most prominent views on the subject and draws a line that both sythesizes and advances their competing claims. In Moore’s view, one’s appreciation of the beauty in artifacts informs an appreciation of the beauty in nature and vice versa. It is all good, as is this clearly written, cogently argued, well informed, informative book.” — J.M. Carvalho, Villanova University — in Choice



      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Introduction

      Chapter 1: Appreciating Nature as Natural

      • The Problem of Appreciation
        Glass Flowers
        Warhol and Blaschka

      Chapter 2: Conceptualism and Non-conceptualism

      • Conceptualism and Its Problems
        Non-conceptualism and Its Problems
        Syncretic Aesthetics

      Chapter 3: The Historical Roots of Syncretism: Early Developments

      • Ancient Views
        Medieval and Renaissance Views
        Early Modern Developments

      Chapter 4: The Historical Roots of Syncretism: Modern Developments

      • Kant and the Subjective Turn
        Schopenhauer and the Aesthetic Attitude
        Recent Aesthetic Experience Theory
        Critical Responses to This Theory
        Where This Leaves Us

      Chapter 5: Aesthetic Experience Revisited

      • Cold Plums
        Hunkered-down Aesthetic Experience
        Grains of Sand

      Chapter 6: The Framing Paradox

      • Nature Unframed
        Nature Framed
        The Paradox and Its Resolution

      Chapter 7: Syncretic Regard—Part I

      • Judges and “True Judges”
        The Natureworld
        Fundamental Elements in Judgments of Natural Beauty
        • Selective Sensory Focus
          Completeness Within Limits
          Savoring
          Letting Nature Be Nature
      • Typal and General Judgment

      Chapter 8: Syncretic Regard—Part II

      • General Factors
        • Intensive Beauty
          Formal Beauty
          Formal Beauty and Formalism
          Connective Beauty
          Elaborative Imagination
      • Art and Nature
        • Reciprocity: Learning from Each Other
          Inhibition: Getting in Each Other’s Way

      Chapter 9: Patterns of Appreciation and Aesthetic Development

      • Carlson’s Inventory
        The Place of Syncretic Theory
        Growing Up Aesthetically

      Chapter 10: Theoretical Implications and Conclusion

      • Layers of Response
        Hard Questions
        Conclusion

      References
      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account