By Dr
Muhammad Maroof Shah
24 Jul 2020
“Man can live without science, he can live
without bread, but without beauty, he could no longer live because there would
no longer be anything to do to the world. The whole secret is here, the whole
of history is here.”
(Dostoevsky)
Laotze’s and Kant’s respective remarks about
beauty as “the usefulness of the useless,” and “purposiveness without purpose”
are recalled in Martha Nasubaum’s choice of the title of her work “Nor for
Profit: Why Democracy Needs Humanities.”
Given the modern penchant for utility and
commodification that reserves only a small corner for arts in museums and seeks
profit by organising art exhibitions, and impoverished modern souls not ready
to live and die for beauty, the twentieth century has been the ugliest as
Ananda Coomaraswamy noted. Our standard references to immortal works of art and
architecture usually go to ancient or medieval times against traditional
cultures that glorified God by cultivating beauty within and without,
It is imperative to take stock of arts
that have been the temple of beauty and are today widely sought to partly fulfil
our hunger for transcendence. We need to take note of the role of arts and
humanities in the central task of fashioning humans and giving them the
motivation to live soulfully or meaningfully and in the refinement of culture
as against civilization, (a distinction often ignored). Cultivating beauty,
which is said to be the fulfillment of religion (Ihsan is HusnPaidaKerden)
in a famous prophetic tradition (Hadith-i-Jibriel) is what has been forgotten
despite a penchant for the so-called beauty industry.
According to all traditions, it is
possible to reclaim the paradise whose image we harbour deep inside and it is
education that involves humanities that has a role here. In an age when
politicians and even universities might claim that the humanities don’t matter
and we ought to steer students into science, technology, engineering and math
and we find such things as the recent report of the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences on the crisis in the Humanities entitled “The Heart of the Matter”
philosopher and novelist Rebecca Goldstein has been, thus, paraphrased by a
reviewer: "The humanities assert the sanctity of the individual, help us puzzle
out the meaning of existence, teach us to examine our assumptions and urge us
to consider others’ assumptions, she said. The study of the humanities might be
under siege right now, but ‘it will prevail,’ she said.” Nietzsche, whose
fascination with a sort of post-religious or supra-religious mysticism is
little appreciated, didn’t fail to recognise that religion “was useful for
providing meaning, community, and helping to deal with the problems of life.”
His first suggestion was to “replace religion with philosophy, art, music,
literature, theatre, and other parts of the humanities to provide similar
benefits.” Art indeed has been central to postmodern philosophers in the task
of overcoming nihilism. It is central to Nietzsche and Heidegger and we can
find its contemporary articulation in “All Things Shining: Reading the Western
Classics to Find Meaning in a Secular Age” by Hubert Dreyfus and Sean Dorrance
Kelly. The role of art, of tragedy, of play, of beauty, of everything, that
humanities engage with is writ large in the pages of every contemporary text
that treats, in non-religious or non-theistic terms, the question of meaning.
Arnold has been proved right. It is another matter how far this endeavour
succeeds and whether we need to contend with it.
It is sad to note that despite realising
the significance of art and beauty, they stand exiled from our midst. We have
failed to take sufficient note of pleas of artists wedded to beauty. Against
traditional man, we have largely forgotten beauty in our houses, in our
surroundings, in cities, in villages, in souls. And that explains suffocating
lives we live. It is museums that are beautiful and they are generally from
ages past when man’s religion was a beauty and not utility. Today, our
architecture is, generally speaking, designed for utility or vanity. And that
has given us a largely ugly, homogeneous, and inhospitable world where all
cities look alike and you can find suffocating monotony of banks, malls,
schools, hospitals that are designed without regard for vivifying symbolism and
for the dead – customers/clients/alienated individuals or hired workers. They
are best for the dead.
To be true to human or better man’s
divine image is the heart of humanities as traditionally conceived. Humanities
are not to be reduced to sciences but taken as guardians of culture, as
creators of value that others then exchange. In a country where the role of
God/Sacred or religion is considered important in the framing of the
constitution, humanities and their place and funding need to be a priority even
if it would be led to question current framing of humanities in the dominant
secularizing episteme. Humanities are central to the task of fashioning souls
so should be autonomous as madrasahs have been or funded by the community. Or
Madrasahs have to be integrated to universities or revitalized in the classical
sense when they performed the role of humanities. A few suggestions from
Manazar Ahsan Gilani and Newman regarding marrying the classical idea of university/madrassah
with the modern institutions substituting them are worth considering in this
context.
Beauty, as the “splendour of the Truth”
and “attractive power of the Good” or perfection, is also a noetic (knowledge
giving) beside an aesthetic notion and satisfies that longing to know the Real
or what is considered absolute. Invoking the theology of the aesthetic and
emphasising reading art as a ritual for purification and support to
contemplation one could counter pervasive crisis of meaning or values in
postmodernity that has impacted humanities’ construction of the human. Martin
Lings’ study Shakespeare in the Light of Sacred Art and Harold Bloom’s
Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human may be read to retrieve the torn and
forgotten image of the human, pontifical theomorphic man in the wake of the
dominance of sciences at the cost of humanities in the modern world.
Original
Headline: Art, Beauty and the Task of Humanities
Source: The Daily Times, Pakistan
URL: https://newageislam.com/spiritual-meditations/cultivating-beauty-said-be-fulfillment/d/122463
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