•  970
    Aesthetic reflection and the very possibility of art
    In Ian North (ed.), Visual Animals: Cross Overs, Evolution and New Aesthetics, Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia. pp. 73-83. 2007.
    If we conceive of ourselves as animals, it might be accurate to call us visual animals. The visual cortex is much larger in us relative to the size of our brains than in other animals, and large relative to the parts of the cortex responsible for the transmission of signals emanating from the other perceptual transducers. Our ability to recall visual images, recombine them in imagination and enter imaginatively into narratives is linked to this evolved piece of brain architecture. However, wha…Read more
  •  1046
    Aesthetics and Film. By Katherine Thomson‐Jones (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 62 (249): 865-867. 2012.
    Each chapter covers one topic and largely consists of brief summaries of arguments for and against various themes. The topic of the first chapter is whether and on what basis a film can be considered art. Photography is used as an analogy. The arguments range from considering the mechanical form of cinema as an obstacle to arthood to arguments considering cinema’s mechanical nature as essential to its arthood; the former by those who ground art in human agency, the latter by those who ground …Read more
  •  1149
    Review of The metaphysics of beauty (review)
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 60 (4): 358-60. 2002.
    This book is a compilation of papers that Zangwill has had published previously in a number of journals; this journal among them. The topics of these papers centre on the nature of aesthetic properties. Read as such, the papers are, for the most part, erudite and illuminating, presenting as they do a very clear synthesis of various well known positions on the relation of aesthetic properties to non-aesthetic properties; the relation of beauty to other aesthetic concepts; and the nature of the …Read more
  •  624
    Review of Revealing Art (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 56 (224): 471-73. 2006.
    Matthew Kieran addresses a number of key topics in aesthetics including the nature of originality, beauty, artistic knowledge and truth, the moral content of art, and the standards of taste. His treatment of each topic is informed by the thesis that the value of art is to be found in the insights that it provides. The structure of each chapter is to canvas a few positions (usually including one that would represent a counter position to his thesis), before presenting an interpretation of the t…Read more