•  16
    Review of Seeing fictions in film: the epistemology of movies, by George M. Wilson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.
  •  9
    This paper identifies and critiques some of the interdisciplinary strategies adopted in recent trends in cinema studies. Prevalent psychological assumptions and normative claims are examined, and some alternative approaches are proposed. Typical theses about narrative in the cinema provide a particular point of focus.
  •  7
    In an essay first published in 1959, Roland Barthes declared that modern literature had become “a mask pointing to itself ”.1 Barthes described this self-reflexivity as an anxious, even tragic condition, a tortured process in which literature divides itself into the two logically distinct, yet inter-related levels of object-language and meta-language. Asking itself continually the single, self-absorbing question of its own identity, literature becomes a meta-language and thereby ceases to be an …Read more
  •  58
    Intentionalism in aesthetics is, quite generally, the thesis that the artist's or artists' intentions have a decisive role in the creation of a work of art, and that knowledge of such intentions is a necessary component of at least some adequate interpretive and evaluative claims. In this paper I develop and defend this thesis. I begin with a discussion of some anti-intentionalist arguments. Surveying a range of intentionalist responses to them, I briefly introduce and criticize a fictionalist v…Read more
  •  11
    [Book review article, no abstracts available]
  •  12
    When Comedy, Music and Ballet step forward at the end of L'Amour medecin, the audience learns that in Moliere's theater the farcical passage from sickness to health is much more than a theme. Claiming to have a real therapeutic value, the three arts ask to be recognized as the grands medecins, and present themselves as an alternative to a dubious and rather mercenary medical profession.
  •  11
    Cinematic fictions often depict characters who face a remarkable variety of natural and otherworldly dangers, such as attacks by aliens, dinosaurs, zombies, killer puppets, and swarms of insects. The risk of physical injury and death is the staple of the horror, crime, war, and action genres, while in art films, the focus tends to be on psychological and moral perils. Risk is such a pervasive subject in fi lm that one is tempted to conjecture that this is the main attraction of that seemingly lo…Read more
  •  21
    Paisley Livingston asks questions about the arguments Philosopher George M. Wilson offers in order to establish that the Mediated Version of his Imagined Seeing Thesis is superior to other options.
  • Contribution to a book forum on Athenes kammer
    SATS 2 (1): 166-168. 2001.
  •  19
    Discussion: On Authorship and Collaboration
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (2): 217-220. 2011.
  •  19
    Testimony about episodes of artistic creativity often describes a puzzling combination of deliberate and involuntary elements. For example, Vincent Van Gogh wrote that it was possible for him to make an especially expressive picture, or as he put it, something with “feeling” in it, because the picture had already spontaneously taken form in his mind before he started drawing. He added, however, that if there was something worthwhile in the picture, this was “not by accident but because of real i…Read more
  •  85
    Artistic Collaboration and the Completion of Works of Art
    with Carol Archer
    British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (4): 439-455. 2010.
    We present an analysis of work completion couched in terms of an effective completion decision identified by its characteristic contents and functions. In our proposal, the artist's completion decision can take a number of distinct forms, including a procedural variety referred to as an ‘extended completion decision’. In the second part of this essay, we address ourselves to the question of whether collaborative art-making projects stand as counterexamples to the proposed analysis of work comple…Read more
  •  9
    [Book review article, no abstract is available]
  •  50
    The Philosophy of Art
    British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (4): 431-433. 2006.
    Book review of The Philosophy of Art. By STEPHEN DAVIES.. Blackwell. 2006
  •  3
    Intention in Art
    In Jerrold Levinson (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Aesthetics, Oxford University Press. 2003.
  •  71
    Utile et dulce: A response to noël Carroll
    British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (3): 274-281. 2006.
    l Carroll's criticisms of my essay on C. I. Lewis's conception of aesthetic experience, I discuss reasons given in support of axiological accounts of aesthetic experience, including Lewis's contentions about the intrinsic valence of all experiences and his emphasis on the interests motivating philosophical classifications of experience. I also respond to Carroll's remarks about a possible explanatory requirement on a conception of aesthetic experience and the idea that artists have aesthetic exp…Read more
  •  72
    C. I. Lewis and the outlines of aesthetic experience
    British Journal of Aesthetics 44 (4): 378-392. 2004.
    The current essay describes aspects of C. I. Lewis’s rarely cited contributions to aesthetics, focusing primarily on the conception of aesthetic experience developed in An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation. Lewis characterized aesthetic value as a proper subset of inherent value, which he understood as the power to occasion intrinsically valued experiences. He distinguished aesthetic experiences from experiences more generally in terms of eight conditions. Roughly, he proposed that aesthetic e…Read more
  •  55
    This chapter contains sections titled: “Solid Objects” and Its Interpretations Towards an Alternative Interpretation “Solid Objects” as a reductio ad absurdum of One Kind of Aesthetic Theory Rapture does not Suffice.
  •  38
    Bernard Bolzano: On the Concept of the Beautiful - A Philosophical Essay
    Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 52 (2): 203-266. 2015.
    An intorduction to an English translation of Bernad Bolzano´s On the Concept of the Beautiful. A neglected gem in the history of aesthetics, Bolzano’s essay on beauty is best understood when read alongside his other writings and philosophical sources. This introduction is designed to contribute to such a reading. In Part I, I identify and discuss three salient ways in which Bolzano’s account can be misunderstood. As a lack of familiarity with Bolzano’s background assumptions is one source of the…Read more
  •  120
    History of the Ontology of Art
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2011.
    First critical survey devoted to the history of philosophical contributions to this topic. Brings to light neglected contributions prior to the second half of the 20th century including works in Danish, German, and French. Provides a division of issues and clarifies key ambiguities related to modality
  •  148
    On an apparent truism in aesthetics
    British Journal of Aesthetics 43 (3): 260-278. 2003.
    It has often been claimed that adequate aesthetic judgements must be grounded in the appreciator's first-hand experience of the item judged. Yet this apparent truism is misleading if adequate aesthetic judgements can instead be based on descriptions of the item or on acquaintance with some surrogate for it. In a survey of responses to such challenges to the apparent truism, I identify several contentions presented in its favour, including stipulative definitions of ‘aesthetic judgement’, asserti…Read more
  •  566
    Artwork completion: a response to Gover
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 73 (4): 460-462. 2015.
    Response to Gover (2015) on Trogdon and Livingston (2015) on artwork completion.
  •  14
    L'ontologie et la valeur artistique
    Philosophiques 32 (1): 224-229. 2005.