What is the relevance of organizing knowledge in distinct conceptual fields when everything has become cultural with no distinct areas anymore? Is, for example, Western traditional aesthetics as an autonomous cognitive discipline always relevant in the age of multiculturalism? This essay argues, albeit controversially, that the perspective of so-called cultural studies has opened new doors by adopting a more radically pluralistic and inclusive approach- one whereby aesthetic categories are thought in terms of cultural practices. Despite the many defects of such culture-related studies- such as their eclecticism, lack of scientific rigor, or methodological unreliability- the challenges of today's multicultural society demand that we pay more attention at all levels to the roles played by difference and dialogue with otherness. This includes overcoming any form of ethnocentricity in our cognitive cultural disciplines; incorporating new topical horizons, whether economic, political or social; and rethinking the very nature of value, meaning and way of life.
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