Dewey insisted that aesthetic experience is not a special class of experience reserved for the gallery and the concert hall. It is any experience that achieves the quality of wholeness — a unified, developing, self-completing event in which the doing and the undergoing are fully integrated. Greene extended the claim: the deliberate cultivation of this quality through sustained engagement with demanding art is the most reliable educational method available for developing the capacities that mature judgment requires.
The four capacities aesthetic experience develops map directly onto the skills the AI moment makes economically essential. Perceptual sensitivity is the ability to distinguish, among ten AI-generated solutions, which one actually serves the user. Tolerance for ambiguity is the capacity to sit with a problem long enough to understand it rather than grabbing the first plausible AI output. Creative courage is the willingness to reject the fluent and confident in favor of the untested and true. Empathic imagination is the capacity to design not for function but for experience — for the human being on the other side of the interface.
Greene was clear that aesthetic experience cannot be lectured into existence. It requires actual encounter with actual work. The student who has only heard about Beloved has not experienced Beloved. The cultivation is slow, uneconomical by industrial measures, and irreducibly particular to each encounter. This is precisely why the capacities it produces resist automation: the production process itself cannot be standardized without destroying its output.
The operational question for the AI era is whether encounters with AI-generated artifacts can produce aesthetic experience in Greene's sense. The skeptical argument is structural: the artifacts regress toward the statistical center of their training data and therefore tend to confirm rather than disrupt habitual perception. The generous argument is that a sufficiently wide-awake user can direct the tools toward defamiliarizing outputs. Greene's framework would insist on the latter possibility while acknowledging the default pull toward the former.
Greene's account synthesized Dewey's Art as Experience (1934), Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology of perception, and the Russian formalist account of defamiliarization. She developed the framework across her work with the Lincoln Center Institute beginning in 1976 and articulated it most fully in Releasing the Imagination (1995).
Transformation, not information. Aesthetic experience changes the perceiver's capacity for perception, not merely her stock of facts.
Four capacities. It develops perceptual sensitivity, tolerance for ambiguity, creative courage, and empathic imagination — the core skills of AI-era judgment.
Effortful encounter. It requires active engagement with work that resists assimilation, not passive consumption of pleasing artifacts.
Irreducibly particular. The cultivation cannot be standardized or automated without destroying the capacities it produces.
AI default. The generative outputs of large language models tend toward the familiar rather than the strange, working against defamiliarization unless deliberately directed otherwise.