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Episode 107, 'The Ethics of Art' with Daisy Dixon (Part I - Immoral Art)

Episode 107, 'The Ethics of Art' with Daisy Dixon (Part I - Immoral Art)

The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast · The Panpsycast Philosophy Podcast and Daisy Dixon, University of Cambridge

May 8, 202248m 42s

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Show Notes

Introduction

Art is created by people, but people are fallible. When the art we love is tainted by the brush of an artist's biography, we must ask whether the shift in our aesthetic experience is reasonable. One might also wonder whether artworks can do wrong in and of themselves. If artworks can be intended as conveyers of truth, can they convey falsehoods or – more awkwardly – lies? These aren't just conceptual problems. If artworks lie and immoral artists are inseparable from their artworks, how should we respond? Should we censor all art, some art, or no art at all?

In this episode, we'll be discussing the ethics of art with Cambridge University's Dr Daisy Dixon. Dixon's work, which explores the nature of (and responses to) unethical art, invites us to place art within its context – to consider artworks in relation to their artists, truth-functionality in relation to an artwork's surroundings, and dangerous artworks in relation to their curation. If we do so, says Dixon, we'll not only gain a better understanding of art but how we can bring about a better world.

Contents

Part I. Time

Part II. Further Analysis and Discussion

Links

Daisy Dixon, Website.

Daisy Dixon, University Profile.

Daisy Dixon, Conflicted art: how to approach works by morally bad artists.

Daisy Dixon, Lies in Art.

Daisy Dixon, Should we censor art?: a philosophical guide on how to manage dangerous art.