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Neuroaesthetics promises to reinvigorate science's search for a theory of beauty.



Why is something beautiful? David Hume argued that beauty exists not in things but "in the mind that contemplates them." And everyone has at some point heard the old saw that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But Plato had a fanciful answer made to argue for a universal truth: In his world of forms, he claimed there existed a perfect Form of Beauty, which was imperfectly manifested in what we call beautiful.

The "uglier" a painting, the greater the motor cortex activity, as if the brain was preparing to escape.