The argument proceeds in three structural steps. First, beauty invites a specific kind of attention: not the strategic, instrumental attention of self-interest but lateral, precise, disinterested attention. Second, justice requires the same kind of attention: to be just to another person is to engage in precisely the cognitive operation that beauty teaches. Third, the practice of attending to beauty is therefore a preparation for the practice of justice.
The opposing tradition — running from the Frankfurt School through Bourdieu to Wendy Brown — held that beauty was, at best, irrelevant to justice and, at worst, complicit in it. Beauty aestheticized suffering; it distracted from structural inequality; it provided pleasure to the privileged while the unprivileged continued to suffer. Scarry's response does not deny the evidence of unequal distribution but refuses the conclusion. Beauty has been hoarded by the powerful, but that does not make beauty itself an instrument of power. The remedy is not less beauty but more justly distributed beauty, because the just distribution of beauty is not a luxury but a necessity for the perceptual training that justice itself requires.
Applied to AI, the framework reveals that the distinction between fair and unfair surfaces is not an aesthetic preference but an ethical necessity. A culture saturated with unfair surfaces — polished presentations that do not sustain examination — loses the perceptual training that fair surfaces provide. The builder who produces merely adequate output contributes to this degradation; the builder who insists on genuine correspondence between intention and expression contributes to the perceptual ecology within which justice-apt attention can still be cultivated.
The argument has direct consequences for the question of what AI governance should protect. Traditional frameworks focus on accuracy, safety, and fairness in the narrow sense of non-discrimination. Scarry's framework adds a dimension these frameworks cannot reach: the protection of the perceptual conditions under which citizens can still distinguish between genuine and manipulative communication. This is not an aesthetic luxury but the foundation on which democratic deliberation rests.
The argument is developed across the two essays of On Beauty and Being Just (Princeton University Press, 1999), expanded from Scarry's 1998 Tanner Lectures at Yale. Its direct target was the political-aesthetic tradition that had dismissed beauty as politically regressive.
Structural identity. The cognitive operation beauty produces and the cognitive operation justice requires are not merely analogous but identical; each decenters the self and enables lateral precision.
Training rather than guarantee. Beauty prepares the perceiver for justice without guaranteeing just action; the capacity for justice-apt attention must be cultivated, and beauty is the most powerful cultivator available.
The Rawlsian equivalent. John Rawls's veil of ignorance is an elaborate philosophical device for producing through reason what beauty produces spontaneously through perception.
Against the dismissal. The dismissal of beauty as politically trivial misidentifies its function by confusing its unequal distribution with its structural role; the remedy is expanded access, not rejection.
Distribution matters. Just distribution of beauty is not a luxury but a necessity because beauty provides perceptual training on which just distribution itself depends.