Human Nature and Art: From Descartes and Hume to Tolstoy

  • Wertz S
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Abstract

Leo Tolstoy's theory of human nature is sketched with Descartes's and Hume's theories of human nature in the background for context. Tolstoy's view is limited to "What Is Art"?, although it could be substantially augmented by references to his other well-known works. "By words a man transmits his thoughts," to which Tolstoy adds, "by means of art he transmits his feelings." Language and art work together to give us an aesthetic education that is built around the forms of communication found in the arts: story-telling, singing, acting, dancing, making, and so on. These activities reflect the fundamentals of human nature; hence, the connection Tolstoy found between human nature and art that previous thinkers had not made.

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Wertz, S. K. (1998). Human Nature and Art: From Descartes and Hume to Tolstoy. Journal of Aesthetic Education, 32(3), 75. https://doi.org/10.2307/3333307

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