Hahaha. Invisible thing serves an aesthetic purpose. Wow. That's new. I've heard a lot of stupidity from crypto bros but this takes the cake. You people need to seek professional help.
You walked right into that, didn't you? Hahahaha!
Visual aesthetic is quite common, but yes, invisible things can serve an aesthetic purpose as well. Music is a perfect example - you listen to it, not look at it. But even abstract concepts and ideas, like math for example, can be aesthetically pleasing if it's elegant and well-structured.
As for calling you stupid, I wouldn't go that way. You just seem like you don't know a lot about this topic. I'm always trying to educate myself more on things I don't understand well. You should try it.
I see you're doubling down on stupidity. Aesthetics is related to senses. You must see, hear, smell, or touch something to be able to talk about aesthetics.
Oh, so now you're finally catching on that invisible things can serve an aesthetic purpose? Well, I appreciate your newfound common sense. Maybe next time, you'll actually think before you speak.
Invisible virtual points that some protocol attributed to online addresses have nothing to do with aesthetics. They are just records of participation in an investment pyramid where you pay in purposeful items and then wait for new contributors to get such items back. It's not stupid to join that - it's just greed or ignorance. But claiming that records of participation in it serve aesthetic purpose is the stupidity at its best.
Well, I know a bunch of people who would disagree with that. Aesthetics is not only about what you can feel with your senses. For many people, aesthetics can be about the elegance of the design, the technology or even digital assets. For example, mathematicians and physicists often think some theorems and definitions are beautiful or elegant, attaching importance to the aesthetics of their work (ref:
Mathematical beauty).
"A mathematician, like a painter or a poet, is a maker of patterns." - G.H. Hardy
And, in the world of technology, Steve Jobs famously stated,
"Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works."So just because something doesn't fit your personal view of aesthetics doesn't mean it's not artistic or good design for other people. Aesthetics are subjective, you know? What one person finds beautiful or elegant, someone else might think is whack.