The Decline of Beauty

The Primacy of Beauty – Dr. John Vervaeke

Lecture 1: The Decline of Beauty

🎨 What Happened to Beauty?

Beauty once held a sacred place in human experience.
Plato, Dionysius, Augustine, and Aquinas all saw beauty as a name of God, not just a quality of appearances.
It was considered a way in which truth occurred — a disclosure of reality.

“God is not just beautiful. God is beauty.” – Augustine

Today, however, beauty has fallen.
We don’t treat it as sacred. We treat it as subjective preference, or worse, as consumer indulgence.

🧠 The Hermeneutics of Suspicion

Modern thinkers like Nietzsche, Marx, and Freud taught us to distrust appearances.
This is the “hermeneutics of suspicion” — the idea that everything hides an agenda.

We’ve been trained to believe:

  • Appearances deceive.
  • Meaning is projection.
  • Nothing is what it seems.

But this skepticism depends on its opposite — the idea that some appearances actually disclose reality.

“You can’t call something an illusion unless you compare it to something real.”

📸 Beauty as Disclosure

The ancients saw beauty as the moment of realization — when something appears, and we suddenly see what is true.

  • Not just aesthetic pleasure.
  • A moment of insight.
  • A revelation of realness.

This is beauty not as decoration, but as transformation.

🧴 The Aesthetics of the Smooth

Philosopher Byung-Chul Han critiques how modern society replaces beauty with smoothness:

  • No friction.
  • No resistance.
  • Easy, clean, consumable.

From phones to interfaces to pornography, the world is designed to go down easy.

“The smooth is the enemy of mystery.”

🍑 Pornography and Modal Confusion

Porn is a metaphor for our approach to beauty today:

  • It reduces the other to a consumable object.
  • It hides reality behind total availability.
  • It removes mystery and challenge.

This leads to modal confusion:

  • Treating being-needs (love, truth, beauty) as having-needs (possession, consumption).
  • Trying to “have” beauty instead of becoming through it.

💍 Mystery vs. Problem

Beauty is mysterious — not a puzzle to solve, but a depth to dwell in.

  • A problem ends when solved.
  • A mystery invites endless contemplation.

“You want your partner to be a mystery—not a solved problem.”

🪞 Contemplation, Not Consumption

We don’t just consume beauty—we contemplate it.

  • Consumption says: Take it in.
  • Contemplation says: Be changed by it.

Beauty is a calling. It’s kallos in Greek: to call forth.

🧠 Fromm’s Modes: Having vs. Being

Erich Fromm identifies two existential modes:

  • Having Mode: Control, possess, consume.
  • Being Mode: Grow, become, mature.

Beauty only appears in the being mode.

“When we treat being-needs with having-mode strategies, we corrupt them.”

🧠 The Cognitive Science of Beauty

Modern psychology supports the depth of beauty through fluency research:

  • When something is easier to process, we perceive it as more true and beautiful.
  • This is domain-general — it applies across art, text, language, etc.
  • Suggests beauty is tied to cognition, not just emotion or biology.

🧠 Beauty, Intelligence, and Intelligibility

Dr. Vervaeke connects beauty to:

  • General Intelligence — the ability to solve diverse problems.
  • Anticipation — our ability to predict and prepare.
  • Relevance Realization — the cognitive act of discovering what matters.

All of these help us realize what is intelligible — a deep form of truth.

🌌 The Imaginal vs. Imaginary

Drawing on philosopher Henry Corbin, Vervaeke introduces:

  • Imaginary – passive, image-as-object (like imagining a sailboat).
  • Imaginal – active, image-as-lens (like a child becoming Superman).

The imaginal realm is where beauty happens:

  • It’s between perception and imagination.
  • Between top-down prediction and bottom-up data.
  • It’s how we see through into depth.

🧠 Fluency and Depth

Modern beauty has become:

  • Flat
  • Shallow
  • Smooth
  • Subjective

But true beauty invites us into:

  • Depth
  • Challenge
  • Mystery
  • Meaning

🧵 Summary Points to Remember

  • Beauty once meant disclosure of being and sacredness.
  • Modernity replaced it with suspicion and surface.
  • The “smooth” world hides mystery, depth, and transformation.
  • Beauty belongs to the being mode, not the having mode.
  • It requires contemplation, not consumption.
  • Cognitive science confirms beauty is tied to fluency, anticipation, and relevance.
  • The imaginal is the space where beauty truly lives.

➡️ Next Lecture
We’ll go deeper into the ancient concept of beauty as a path to truth and the good.

“Beauty is not a luxury — it’s the call to become fully real.”

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