The Philosphy of Art

The Philosphy of Art
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Contents
Why study the philosophy of art?
1. Evolution and culture
A biological basis for art
The cultural invention of art
The big and the small picture
"It all depends what you mean by the word art."
Applications and Connections - the museum, tourist art, popular art, and ancient art
2. Defining art
Essentialism and anti-essentialism
Arguments against the project of definition
If not an essence, what unifies the concept of art?
Some definitions of art
Definitions and non-Western art
Taking stock
Applications and Connections - intuition versus definition, art´s value and definition, Euthyphro and experts
3. Aesthetics and the philosophy of art
Aesthetic and artistic properties
An illustration
The aesthetic attitude and art for art´s sake
Aesthetic theory criticized
Artworks that pose a challenge to aesthetic theory
Art´s contextually relative properties
Art for art´s sake, again
Applications and Connections - copies and misattributions, viscera and understanding
4. Varieties of art
Artworks as public items
Are artworks created or discovered?
Are all artworks potentially multiple?
Multiply instanced artworks
New works based on old ones
The ontological variety of works of art
Is the identity of an artwork fixed or evolving?
Applications and Connections - musical recordings, the movie of the movie, the matter replicator
Questions
Further reading
5. Interpretation
When is interpretation necessary?
What is interpreted?
Actual intentionalism
Hypothetical intentionalism
Value maximization
Uses for interpretation
Theory-driven interpretation
Does interpretation change the work´s meaning?
What is interpretation´s primary purpose?
6. Expression and emotional responses
The nature of emotion
Identifying others´ emotions
Identifying the emotions in art
The expression of emotion in music and abstract art
The emotional response of the audience to the work of art
Responding to fictions
Responding to tragedies
Responding to the expressiveness of instrumental music and abstract art
7. Pictorial representation and the visual arts
The experience of representation
Representation and resemblance
Representation — culture and biology again
Art versus non-art, a matter of style
Representation in photographs and paintings
Recognition and representation
Photography as an art
Moving images
8. The value of art
Evaluation and functionality
Rules, universality, and objectivity in artistic evaluation
The purpose and form of artistic evaluation
What is rewarding about the experience of art?
Value and pleasure
Art and education
Messages through art
The relation between artistic and moral values
Should a work´s immorality undermine its claims to artistic merit?
Morality in documentaries and fictions