Chapter 42: The Aesthetic Functional
Pre-symbolic resonance established that aesthetic response precedes symbolic representation: a motif resonates when it transports under admissible transformations without re-interpretation. This chapter makes the notion precise by introducing the aesthetic functional A, a defect measure on the space of motifs that assigns to each motif m a non-negative real number quantifying how far m deviates from perfect invariance. The central result is the Beauty-as-Invariance Theorem: a motif is beautiful if and only if A(m) = 0, i.e., if and only if it is invariant under all admissible transformations. The theorem does not legislate taste; it identifies the structural content of the word “beautiful” within the categorical framework. The subjective-versus-objective debate in aesthetics is thereby dissolved: subjective responses track the functional, so both aspects—felt resonance and structural invariance—are real.