In this discussion of the aesthetic in everyday life the aesthetic codes of advertising, architecture, the Internet and everyday images are used as examples of the disorientation which a multiplication of codes creates. Welsch proposes untangling the `aestheticization of everyday life' and replacing it by more meaningful and durable categories.
Über den Autor Wolfgang Welsch
Wolfgang Welsch ist Professor em. für Philosophie. Bis 2012 lehrte er Theoretische Philosophie an der Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena.