In fact, maybe it means that there is not much worthwhile left to say... The question of greatness, and the possible answers to it, are not really very complicated IMHO. They only become so when one tries to come up with some kind of universal formula.
Well, no (the possible answers are complicated) and yes (they, not "become" but are complicated when you try to come up with a universal answer).
But that must be.
Not many of us dislike, say, to be hugged now and again (conditionally: by the right person, at the proper time, and all that).
There we have a generality already. A very real one.
The question is why we like to get hugged.
It is easy to concentrate on the conditionals. We just all make lists of the persons we like to be hugged by, for instance.
And then what? Find huggers that appear on more than one list?
What does that tell us about why we like to get hugged?
(What if we find two people who have no shared huggers on their lists? Is hugging a different thing for either of them? And different from what it is for the rest of us? Many more such difficult questions arise, that bring us not much closer to the desired answer).
Yet everybody capable of making a list of huggers enjoys hugging. It
is a generality, an 'universal' if you so wish.
So better skip that, and go for the real question: what is the thing that makes hugging enjoyable.
But is it really difficult?
Does the fact that the greatness of images must have an universal nature make it realy dificult to answer?
It is more work than just saying "i like Camembert". But is it difficult?
Giving an universal answer is not difficult. The real difficulty lies in understanding what that entails. What (for instance) relevance is, and how it works.
And mostly in agreeing about any and all of it.
A big part of the difficulty is in getting people to agree that, for instance, it is quite o.k. to have answers that are general. In getting people to discuss the possible answers already given (there is enough to be asked and answered right there, with plenty of difficulty already), instead of looking for other ones, etc.
That is also why so many years have gone by with so many words said and so books written.
Keeps philosophers employed though, which is probably useful in these hard times...
It would be. If you could find employers who would employ philosophers to begin with.
How did that Charles M. Schulz 'Peanuts' cartoon go again? What's-her-name writing an essay for kindergarten (pretty advanced!):
"The ancient greeks did not have television. But they had many philosophers. I think i'd rather watch television".
Now who wouldn't?
