These   Determinations  to  be  pleas’d with    any Forms,  or  Ideas   which   occur   to  our Observation,    the
Author  chooses to  call    Senses; distinguishing  them    from    the Powers  which   commonly    go  by  that    Name,
by  calling our Power   of  perceiving  the Beauty  of  Regularity, Order,  Harmony,    an  Internal    Sense;....
(Cited  in  Harrison,   Wood    and Gaiger, 2000,   403,    original    emphasis)Hutcheson’s “inner  sense”  theory  influenced  Hume,   Alexander   Gerard  (1728–1795) and other   thinkers,
and became  a   marker  of  the “polite”    and informed    amateur.    Hume’s  view    of  taste   also    allowed for some
subjective  variation   through his theory  of  associationism, inherited   from    classical   philosophy, according
to  which   we  find    beauty  in  things  when    they    arouse  certain associations    or  memories    in  our minds.  In
1790,   Archibald   Alison  (1757–1839) developed   a   similar view,   in  his Essays  on  the Nature  and
principles  of  Taste.  For Alison, any formulaic   classical   idealism    would   offer   too restrictive and
“aristocratic”  an  approach,   given   the complexities    of  human   nature  and taste:
If  ... in  the human   countenance and form,   there   were    only    certain colours,    or  forms,  or  proportions,
that    were    essentially beautiful,  how imperious   a   check   would   have    been    given,  not only    to  human
happiness,  but to  the most    important   affections  and sensibilities   of  our nature! ... an  Aristocracy would
be  established even    by  Nature  itself, more    irresistible,   and more    independent either  of  talents or
virtue, than    any that    the influence   of  property    or  of  ancestry    has ever    yet created among   mankind.
(Cited  in  Macmillan,  1986,   129)Unlike  the skeptic Hume,   however,    Alison  reinterpreted   the workings    of  taste   in  a   way that    devoted a
large   role    to  Christian   spirituality    (Macmillan, 1986,   149).   Such    approaches  allowed for some    variations
in  taste,  while   retaining   its exclusivity within  the domain  of  the educated    and refined.    Artists themselves
were    often   barred  from    the category    of  “man    of  taste”  because of  their   close   proximity   to  the messy,
material    world   of  paint   (Brewer,    1997,   88–92).
Neoplatonic conceptions of  beauty  were    “formalist” in  the sense   that    they    placed  emphasis    on  aspects
of  an  object’s    form:   in  the eighteenth  century these   normally    included    regularity, order   and harmony in, for
example,    the composition of  a   work    or  in  the drawing of  a   figure. Such    conceptions of  beauty  also    had the
advantage   of  offering    a   universal   explanation of  its cause   and of  its effects on  viewers.    Enlightenment
thinkers    generally   sought  the rational,   universal   principles  underlying  phenomena.  For this    reason  neo
platonic    explanations    of  beauty  continued   to  be  influential throughout  the eighteenth  century,    increasingly
modified,   however (as in  Hume’s  case),  by  a   greater acknowledgement of  empirical   or  “scientific”
method. Hybrid  neoplatonicempiricist   approaches  were    common. In  his  A  Notion  of  the Historical
Draught of  the Tablature   of  the Judgement   of  Hercules    (published  in  English in  1713),  Shaftesbury saw
taste   as  a   particularly    refined form    of  empiricism  based   on  a   patrician   experience  of  art and informed    by  a
universalizing  neoplatonic view    of  beauty  based   on  the idea    of  visual  harmony.    He  was also    strongly
influenced  by  a   traditional emphasis    on  the narrative,  quasiliterary   effectiveness   of  history paintings
(Harrison,  Wood    and Gaiger, 2000,   373).
Other   theorists   who applied neoplatonic principles  included    Hogarth in  his  The    Analysis    of  Beauty
(1753), who identified  a   formal  cause   for beauty  and grace:  the use of  waving  and serpentine  lines,  the
latter  consisting  of  a   threedimensional,   spiraling   version of  the former, in, for example,    the twisting
forms   of  a   dancer’s    body.   Hogarth placed  the waving  line,   derived from    beautiful   natural forms,  at  the
heart   of  his rococo  aesthetic.  His very    particular  formalist   approach    to  taste   has been    seen    as  an  attempt
to  distance    himself from    the prevailing  taste   for works   by  foreign,    often   Catholic,   old masters,    too
influenced  by  less    natural antique forms   (Craske,    2000,   19).    Additionally,   like    other   critics,    including   Du
Bos and the philosopher LouisJean   Lévesque    de  Pouilly (1691–1750) in  his 1736     Theory of  Agreeable
Sentiments  (Théorie    des sentiments  agréables), Hogarth placed  great   emphasis    on  good    sense   and
