The experience of beauty can be so intense for me that it hurts my heart — but it’s a joyful hurt that is full of the pleasure of experiencing something which is completely true and real.
I first encountered this idea when I was too young to understand it. A Star Trek episode quoted a line from English poet George Herbert which asked, “Is there in truth no beauty?”
I spent a lot of time pondering that line, because it felt important in an irrational way. As I read the various English romantic poets in college, I started seeing a glimmer of understanding, but I still wasn’t there.
I read about how the Greeks equated beauty and truth. I read the English poet John Keats’ line, “Beauty is truth and truth is beauty.”
And then when I experienced a deeper form of mature love, it all suddenly made sense. I still couldn’t explain the reasoning, but I could suddenly feel it. When I experience transcendent beauty — of the kind I experienced when I photographed this sunset Monday night — I experience something about truth.

Life is full of choices, but some require us to ‘come before winter’
If voting really changed anything, governments would make it illegal
I can live without ‘Galt’s Gulch,’ but I need my ‘Akston’s diner’
What role does shame play in turning kids from lives of crime?
California pays $205,075 to move shrub that typically sells for $16
Of all the world’s contradictions, our own actions confuse us most
Ruthless impersonal judgment is typical tool of cultural conformity