James K.A. Smith Quote

The music moves us very strongly, because it is moved, as it were; it captures, expresses, incarnates being profoundly moved. (Think of Beethoven quartets.) But what at? What is the object? Is there an object? (p. 355). Nevertheless, we can’t quite shake our feeling that there must be an object. And so, Taylor suggests, even this disembedded art trades on resonances of the cosmic in us (p. 356). And conveniently, art is never going to ask of you anything you wouldn’t want to do. So we get significance without any ascetic moral burden. But

James K.A. Smith

The music moves us very strongly, because it is moved, as it were; it captures, expresses, incarnates being profoundly moved. (Think of Beethoven quartets.) But what at? What is the object? Is there an object? (p. 355). Nevertheless, we can’t quite shake our feeling that there must be an object. And so, Taylor suggests, even this disembedded art trades on resonances of the cosmic in us (p. 356). And conveniently, art is never going to ask of you anything you wouldn’t want to do. So we get significance without any ascetic moral burden. But

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About James K.A. Smith

James Kenneth Alexander Smith (born 1970) is a Canadian-American philosopher who is currently Professor of Philosophy at Calvin University, holding the Gary & Henrietta Byker Chair in Applied Reformed Theology & Worldview. He is the current editor-in-chief of the literary journal Image.