•  8
    Moving for Grace: Motor-Aesthetic Properties and Dance Appreciation
    British Journal of Aesthetics 65 (1): 97-112. 2024.
    Bodily responses to dance have sparked recent controversy in philosophy. Some people claim that they have no place in dance appreciation. Some use evidence from cognitive science to support the view that bodily responses have an important place in dance appreciation. However, this paper focuses not on whether motor responses to dance are part of dance appreciation but on their role in dance appreciation. It argues that many aesthetic qualities important to dance appreciation, such as gracefulnes…Read more
  •  33
    Rethinking Veridicality: Motor Response, Empirical Evidence, and Dance Appreciation
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (1): 57-68. 2023.
    Recent debates in the philosophy of dance have focused on the relationship between motor response and dance appreciation. Some philosophers argue that motor responses to dances are an important part of dance appreciation. Proponents of such a claim are often backed with support from cognitive science. But it has not remained uncontroversial. Despite its controversy, the concept of motor response remains under-analyzed. As a result, assumptions about the idea and purpose of motor response get bor…Read more
  •  223
    What Do We Lose to a Video?
    In Rebecca L. Farinas & Julie Van Camp (eds.), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Dance and Philosophy, Methuen Drama. pp. 339-347. 2020.
    I think we have come to a point in the current state of technology where we, as appreciators, makers, and producers of live performances, must ask ourselves an important question. We must ask ourselves whether, in a world where we can easily access videotapes of performances, there is something important that we obtain through our engagement with live performances that we cannot get in our engagement with even the best quality videos. The performing arts, as artforms which perform with real bodi…Read more