Study more.

From an episode of the TED Radio Hour that I heard on the way to work tonight. The speaker is Paul Bloom, the author of How Pleasure Works.

BLOOM: (P)eople sometimes ask, how do you get more pleasure out of life? And my answer is extremely pedantic. It’s study more. Anything that you don’t understand, unless it’s a sugar doughnut, is really going to be – sort of say, I don’t get it. So that the key to enjoying wine isn’t just to guzzle out a real expensive wine. It’s to learn about wine. Music, learn about music, and so on.

INTERVIEWER: Art, art history.

BLOOM: Exactly. Art history is basically a mechanism for enhancing artistic pleasure. The more you know about it, the more you’ll like.

Yes, yes, yes… “Confirmation bias.” Still…

Never happen to us.

“When we look at the image of our own future provided by the old we do not believe it: an absurd inner voice whispers that that will never happen to us—when that happens it will no longer be ourselves that it happens to.” — Simone de Beauvoir, quoted here.

Art = Psychology

From Gombrich‘s Art and Illusion:

“Art being a thing of the mind, it follows that any scientific study of art will be psychology. It may be other things as well, but psychology it will always be.”

Max J. Friedländer, Von Kunst und Kennerschaft

Thus, why Gombrich’s subtitle is, “A study in the psychology of pictorial representation.” (And, looking at another source [.PDF//pg. 145], this may well be Gombrich’s own translation of the passage.)