“…Teachers of art and aesthetic learning must develop pedagogies for students that hone emotional and sensory responses to art objects as the students integrate such responses with complementary academic information. Drawing on the works of several scholars of aesthetic training, Lachappelle, Murray, and Neim have developed a teaching strategy that addresses dimensions of the experience of encountering an object of art: affective, perceptual, communicative, and cognitive, each a different kind of knowledge appropriate for subjects like art, and as we shall see, religion, that pull together “ ‘a body of knowledge coming from an external source and the questions and intuitions that surface from within’ ” (Gérard Artaud quoted in Lachappelle, Murray, and Neim 2003, 80). The pedagogy suggested is designed to integrate these types of knowledge in a multiphased approach that leads to a new kind of knowledge, “reconstructed knowledge” (Lachappelle, Murray, and Neim 2003, 90).…”