Sibley's
Legacy
APPROACH TO AESTHETICS, by Frank Sibley. John Benson, Betty Redfern, and
Jerome Roxbee Cox, editors. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2001, 280 pp., $45.00
hardcover.
AESTHETIC CONCEPTS: ESSAYS AFTER SIBLEY, edited by Emily Brady and Jerrold
Levinson. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2001, 239 pp., $49.95 hardcover.
Unquestionably, Frank Sibley should be counted among those who helped
return aesthetics to intellectual health and respectability as a proper
field for philosophical investigation. He published no monographs outlining
his views, but managed nonetheless to make highly influential contributions
to research in aesthetics through a small number of papers. The two books
under review in a sense are long overdue. Sibley died in 1996, before
he could assemble a collection of his papers for publication in a single
volume. Approach to Aesthetics is perhaps the next best thing
— a collection of essays assembled and shaped by a highly conscientious
editorial team. The book collects all of Sibley's published writings in
aesthetics, together with a number of unpublished papers in various states
of completion. The editors were confronted with the difficult question
of what to do with many of these latter pieces. In the end, they made
the unhappy but correct decision to leave out some work, which would have
been of great interest but was still embryonic at the time of Sibley's
death. But while we may not have in this volume the fullness of Sibley's
mature thinking on aesthetics, the importance of its contribution to the
literature is in no way diminished. Clarendon has published Aesthetic
Concepts: Essays After Sibley as a companion to the collection of
Sibley's work. It, too, is a valuable contribution, and evidence of Sibley's
agenda-setting influence on subsequent work in aesthetics. First I shall
explore some of the main themes of Sibley's thought in Approach to
Aesthetics.
Brandon Cooke
Philosophy Department
Auburn University
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