The concept of shifts the focus from the objects of art themselves to the internal mental processes involved in experiencing them. This approach, most prominently advanced by philosopher Bence Nanay in his 2016 book of the same title, argues that aesthetics is fundamentally about "ways of perceiving the world that are really rewarding and special". The Core Argument: Attention
: This is an unusual state where attention is focused on a single object but simultaneously distributed across its many different properties (such as color, texture, and form). For example, when looking at a painting, you might not just see a "tree" but attend to the specific interplay of brushstrokes and light. Aesthetics as philosophy of perception
The central pillar of this framework is the role of . Nanay identifies two primary modes that define aesthetic experience: The concept of shifts the focus from the
: This perspective removes the "art-centrism" of traditional aesthetics. It suggests that looking at a setting sun or a desolate streetscape can be an aesthetic experience if perceived through these specialized modes of attention. For example, when looking at a painting, you
This interdisciplinary field draws heavily on perceptual psychology and neuroscience to explain phenomena like (the ability to see both a 2D surface and the 3D scene it depicts simultaneously) and cross-modal influences (how sound might change the way we "see" an image). Bence Nanay, Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception
: It moves away from debating "What is art?" and instead asks "What is happening in the mind when we find something rewarding?". Academic Context
: Rather than following a "blueprint" for beauty, this model treats every aesthetic encounter as unique, requiring the viewer to attend to the specific, non-repeatable qualities of the object.