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We feel pleasure and we call it beauty".
This says something about the human animal, and Palmatier adds that other studies have found that we feel pleasure from reciprocating out of gratitude, and guilt when we don't.
We feel pleasure at the thought of that self with which we have identified because we feel affirmed by the thought of its realization.
The free play of the faculties on this approach is identical with the judging of the object to be beautiful and in turn with the feeling of pleasure: the pleasure does not precede the judging of the object to be beautiful, and is "consequent" on it only in the sense that we feel pleasure "in virtue" of the judgment.
This seems to imply that the pleasure is distinct from the act of judging, and more specifically that the pleasure precedes the judging: we first feel pleasure, and then claim, perhaps based on characteristics of the pleasure (such as its disinterestedness), that the pleasure is universally valid and hence that the object is beautiful.
That is why over time our brains have adapted to seek light and to ensure that we do that, we have evolved to feel pleasure when exposed to it.
We encounter someone, they make us feel pleasure by making us laugh, we form a positive association with them, and have more positive feelings towards them.
Thanks to Ludwig my first paper got accepted! The editor wrote me that my manuscript was well-written
Listya Utami K.
PhD Student in Biology, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia