Buch, Englisch, 416 Seiten, Format (B × H): 165 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 803 g
Essays at the Intersection
Buch, Englisch, 416 Seiten, Format (B × H): 165 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 803 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-875386-5
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Though a field often thought far from the center of contemporary philosophy, philosophy of art—perhaps more than any other field similarly situated—nevertheless enjoys extensive overlap with and points of exchange at that center. The last decade has seen a marked resurgence of interest in aesthetics and philosophy of art from those working outside these areas, and a reciprocal resurgence of interest in other subfields from philosophers of art.
Art and Philosophy brings together twenty-one original essays at the intersection of art and philosophy. These essays are intersectional in two respects. Firstly, the authors draw meaningful connections between art and philosophy, using artworks to motivate, support, and shape their views. Secondly, the authors draw connections between the theoretical discipline of aesthetics and philosophy of art, on the one hand, and the rest of philosophy, on the other. Some chapters explore philosophical matters by examining art and other aesthetic objects, whilst others bring together contemporary thought and research in aesthetics and philosophy of art with important developments in other areas of philosophy. The chapters are organized into ten sections. These ten sections represent the current issues best exemplifying the productive and informative exchanges that exist at these intersections. The topics range from metaphysics and philosophy of language to creativity and love. By placing the connection to art at the forefront, Art and Philosophy is a testament to the myriad ways art and the philosophy of art intersect and overlap with issues that lie at the core of contemporary philosophy.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- Introduction, Alex King
- SECTION 1. ART AND ITS ORIGINS
- 1: Ontological Contextualism and Upper Paleolithic Cave Art, Stephen Davies
- 2: Paleolithic Cave Painting, John Hyman
- SECTION 2. ART AND METAPHYSICS
- 3: How to Change an Artwork, David Friedell
- 4: The Ontology of Art: Keeping it Easy, Keeping it Real, Amie L. Thomasson
- SECTION 3. ART AND LANGUAGE
- 5: A Pragmatist Approach to Aesthetic Disagreement, E. A. Cantalamessa
- 6: Telling Stories, Jody Azzouni
- SECTION 4. ART AND EPISTEMOLOGY
- 7: Testimony, Understanding, and Art Criticism, Allan Hazlett
- 8: Art, Exemplars, and Knowledge, Keith Lehrer
- SECTION 5. ART AND REPRESENTATION
- 9: Perception and Mental Imagery in Our Engagement with Art, Bence Nanay
- 10: Prosthetic Arts and the Objects of Perception, John Kulvicki
- 11: How to Understand Fiction in Photography, Paloma Atencia-Linares
- SECTION 6. ART AND IMAGINATION
- 12: The Myth of Imaginative Resistance, Amy Kind
- 13: The Imagination, Derek Matravers
- SECTION 7. ART AND CREATIVITY
- 14: Creativity, Spontaneity, and Merit Antti Kauppinen
- 15: The Problem of Creative Intention, Antonia Peacocke
- SECTION 8. ART AND FREE WILL
- 16: Free Will and Aesthetic Responsibility, Dana Kay Nelkin
- 17: Aesthetic Free Will through Control, John Dyck
- SECTION 9. ART AND VALUE
- 18: Aesthetic Debunking Arguments, Adam Gjesdal and Jonathan M. Weinberg
- 19: Trading Up in Relationships with Art, Anthony Cross
- SECTION 10. ART AND LOVE
- 20: Connecting Beauty and Love, Nick Riggle
- 21: "I'll Be the Hero You're Dreaming Of": Popular Music and the Social Construction of Romantic Love, Jasper Heaton, C. S. I. Jenkins, and Aida Roige




