Results for ' Arthur Danto's the abuse of beauty'

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  1.  43
    Beauty and Beautification.Arthur C. Danto - 2000 - In Peg Zeglin Brand, Beauty Matters. Indiana University Press. pp. 65-83.
    Hegel has identified what I have preemptively designated a third aesthetic realm--in addition to natural beauty and artistic beauty--one greatly connected with human life . . . art applied to the enhancement of life . . . But the other border of what I shall designate the Third Realm is equally non-exclusionary, especially when we consider what Hegel singles out under the head of beautiful people--the kind of beauty possessed by Helen of Troy, say, which we must (...)
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  2. Symposium: Arthur Danto, the abuse of beauty.Arthur C. Danto - 2005 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 48 (2):189 – 200.
  3.  54
    Storia e poststoria. Una conversazione1.Arthur C. Danto, Mimmo Paladino & Demetrio Paparoni - 2014 - Rivista di Estetica (35):49-58.
    A conversation between the artist Mimmo Paladino, the philosopher and art critic Arthur C. Danto and the curator Demetrio Paparoni on topics such as beauty, icons, projectuality in art, history of art and its supposed end - the main thread being, obviously, Paladino’s entire corpus.
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  4.  24
    Arthur Danto E a experiência estética.Rachel Costa - 2018 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 59 (139):255-269.
    RESUMO O artigo, em um primeiro momento, reconstrói a separação realizada por Arthur Danto entre Estética e Filosofia da Arte. Essa separação se encontra no fundamento da ontologia dantiana e distancia sua tentativa de definir arte dos argumentos da tradição estética sobre a beleza e o gosto. A partir dessa reconstrução, dou um segundo passo e analiso como Arthur Danto discute com a experiência estética, do modo como é compreendida, principalmente, após Kant, e quais são as suas críticas (...)
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  5.  18
    Beauty and Politics.Matilde Carrasco Barranco - 2021 - In Lydia Goehr & Jonathan Gilmore, A Companion to Arthur C. Danto. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 355–362.
    Arthur Danto's The Abuse of Beauty was a significant contribution to the acclaimed return of beauty that had been taking place since Dave Hickey's 1993 manifesto announced that beauty would be the defining problem of the next decade. One of the most original and important aspects of Danto's look at beauty is that he thought about it as a contribution to art criticism. External aesthetic qualities would be as meaningless as natural (...) intended to play role in conveying a work 's meaning, constitute the aesthetic dimension of the work. For Danto, elegiac beauty can provide political role for the aesthetic quality, but the impossibility of what could be termed an “angry beauty,” capable of outraging people, seriously limits the option of beauty in “angrily political” contemporary art. Danto thought that activist art will try to inflect works with an angry mood in order to turn people against what they are about. (shrink)
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  6. Apposite Bodies: Dancing with Danto.Joshua M. Hall - 2015 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 22 (1):19-36.
    Though Arthur Danto has long been engaged with issues of embodiment in art and beyond, neither he nor most of his interlocutors have devoted significant attention to the art form in which art and embodiment most vividly intersect, namely dance. This article, first, considers Danto’s brief references to dance in his early magnum opus, The Transfiguration of the Commonplace. Second, it tracks the changes in Danto’s philosophy of art as evidenced in his later After the End of Art and (...)
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  7.  73
    Symposium: Arthur Danto, the abuse of beauty.Gregg M. Horowitz - 2005 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 48 (2):155 – 171.
  8.  17
    Sartre.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1991 - Hammersmith, London: Fontana Press.
    "Popular summaries of existentialism and Sartre's ideas have ensured a wide currency for such words as 'absurdity', 'nothingness', 'engagement', 'shame', and 'anguish'. But for Sartre, each of these words embodies a precise philosophical concept which he applies and explores further in his fiction and plays. Synthesized in 'Being and Nothingness' and 'Critique of Dialectical Reason', these concepts comprise a fully articulated philosophical system which, as Arthur C. Danto argues, in its vision and scope, logical responsibility and human relevance, takes (...)
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  9. Nietzsche as Philosopher.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1965 - New York,: Columbia University Press.
    Few philosophers are as widely read or as widely misunderstood as Friedrich Nietzsche. When Danto's classic study was first published in 1965, many regarded Nietzsche as a brilliant but somewhat erratic thinker. Danto, however, presented a radically different picture, arguing that Nietzsche offered a systematic and coherent philosophy that anticipated many of the questions that define contemporary philosophy. Danto's clear and insightful commentaries helped canonize Nietzsche as a philosopher and continue to illuminate subtleties in Nietzsche's work as well (...)
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  10.  93
    Jean-Paul Sartre.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1975 - New York: Viking Press.
    A sympathetic and systematic reconstruction of Sartre's philosophy, explaining its relation to other major philosophical theories. Among the themes elucidated are the relation between reality and our representation of it; the parities between language and consciousness; the relationship between the world as it may be and as we structure it in our interventions as engaged beings; the conceptual interdependence of the self and others; and the connections between factual beliefs and systems of value.--Adapted from book jacket.
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  11. (1 other version)Narration and Knowledge.Arthur C. Danto - 1982 - Philosophy and Literature 6 (1-2):17-32.
    Now in its third edition, _Narration and Knowledge_ is a classic work exploring the nature of historical knowledge and its reliance on narrative. Analytical philosopher Arthur C. Danto introduces the concept of "narrative sentences," in which an event is described with reference to later events and discusses why such sentences cannot be understood until the later event happens. Danto compares narrative and scientific explanation and explores the legitimacy of historical laws. He also argues that history is an autonomous and (...)
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  12.  55
    What Art Is.Arthur C. Danto - 2013 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    _A lively meditation on the nature of art by one of America's most celebrated art critics_ What is it to be a work of art? Renowned author and critic Arthur C. Danto addresses this fundamental, complex question. Part philosophical monograph and part memoiristic meditation, _What Art Is _challenges the popular interpretation that art is an indefinable concept, instead bringing to light the properties that constitute universal meaning. Danto argues that despite varied approaches, a work of art is always defined (...)
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  13. Narration and Knowledge.Arthur C. Danto, Lydia Goehr & Frank Ankersmit - 2007 - Cambridge University Press.
    Now in its third edition, _Narration and Knowledge_ is a classic work exploring the nature of historical knowledge and its reliance on narrative. Analytical philosopher Arthur C. Danto introduces the concept of "narrative sentences," in which an event is described with reference to later events and discusses why such sentences cannot be understood until the later event happens. Danto compares narrative and scientific explanation and explores the legitimacy of historical laws. He also argues that history is an autonomous and (...)
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  14. El mundo del arte.Arthur C. Danto - 2013 - Disputatio. Philosophical Research Bulletin 2 (3):53--71.
    [ES] Este famoso ensayo de Arthur Danto, que se presenta aquí traducido al español, fue el primer desarrollo de su concepto de «mundo del arte» como un marco contextual que da sentido, por medio de sus usos teóricos-lingüísticos, a toda forma de arte reconocible en el mundo. Este concepto tendría una influencia enorme en todo el mundo, y fue la base de todo el pensamiento posterior de Danto acerca del arte, y su principal herramienta filosófica para vender en todas (...)
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  15. Dal mondo dell'arte al regno delle ombre (e ritorno). Arthur Danto, Maya Lin e la bellezza interna.Filippo Fimiani - 2010 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 3 (2).
    Arthur Danto asserts that Maya Lin’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington embodies the rhetoric paradigm of internal beauty’s meaning. However, the relationship to the Kant’s pulchritudo adhaerens is not an easy one: Danto’s recalls against the self-referent formalism of Greenberg’s Modernism and his tacit issues about the environmental non-monumentality of Richard Serra’s Minimalism, are, most importantly, haunted by the unquestioned spectral logic of the image embodiment. The beholders’ reflecting shape on the funeral Wall is, finally, both a pathetic (...)
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  16.  57
    Representational properties and mind-body identity.Arthur C. Danto - 1973 - Review of Metaphysics 26 (3):401-411.
    The Materialist who interests me is the one who identifies such things as thoughts with what he speaks of with a degree of grand unspecificity [[sic]] infuriating to the physiologist as "brain processes" or "brain-states." The casual vagueness with which he invokes the brain happens not to affect the logic of his position, and it will prove more useful than to confront him with a physiologist demanding details to face him instead with a philosophical opponent, even if we must resurrect (...)
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  17.  25
    Mimmo Paladino. Dalla transavanguardia al meridionalismo.Arthur C. Danto - 2014 - Rivista di Estetica:41-49.
    The article retraces Mimmo Paladino’s entire artistic path and tries to identify a characterising trait, although in the innumerable variations of a work that is pluristylistic by its very nature. This trait seems to be “a spirit of South”, the echo of the culture of the Italian South which can be found both in sculptures and paintings that Paladino creates starting from the Eighties.
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  18.  25
    Philosophizing Art: Selected Essays.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1999 - University of California Press.
    Arthur Danto's work has always affirmed a deep relationship between philosophy and art. These essays explore this relationship through a number of concrete cases in which either artists are driven by philosophical agendas or their art is seen as solving philosophical problems in visual terms. The essays cover a varied terrain, with subjects including Giotto's use of olfactory data in _The Raising of Lazarus; _chairs in art and chairs as art; Mel Bochner's Wittgenstein drawings; the work of Robert (...)
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  19.  38
    Ethical Theory and Mystical Experience: A Response to Professors Proudfoot and Wainwright.Arthur C. Danto - 1976 - Journal of Religious Ethics 4 (1):37 - 46.
    The author extends the conclusions of his book "Mysticism and Morality" in light of criticisms by Proudfoot and Wainwright. Against Proudfoot, he argues that the form of any "morality" derivable from mystical insights is so idiosyncratic that it renders meaningless the categories by which we classify morality. Against Wainwright, he appeals to the way in which a mystical insight would penetrate the remainder of one's experience and transfigure it in ways that have moral connotations.
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  20.  49
    Comment on Gewirth Constructing an Epistemology of Human Rights: a Pseudo Problem?: ARTHUR C. DANTO.Arthur C. Danto - 1984 - Social Philosophy and Policy 1 (2):25-30.
    Those rights are human rights which, in Professor Gewirth's phrase, “all persons equally have simply insofar as they are human.” His task is to demonstrate that there are human rights, and to demonstrate that such demonstration is necessary to the very existence of these rights. “That human rights exist…is a proposition whose truth depends upon the possibility, in principle, of constructing a body of moral justificatory argument from which that proposition follows as a logical consequence.” As philosophers we should no (...)
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  21.  70
    Beauty, Anger, and Artistic Activism.Matilde Carrasco Barranco - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (2):280-289.
    The rejection of beauty from a political standpoint is a significant part of the legacy of avant-gardism in contemporary art. In particular, Arthur Danto signaled that artistic activism should avoid beauty simply because beauty induces the wrong perspective on whatever it is desired to have an impact upon. While artistic beauty’s tendency would be to heal, he claimed, political protest needs anger as its trigger. This article challenges such an argument that opposes beauty’s emotional (...)
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  22.  8
    Encounters and Reflections: Art in the Historical Present.Arthur C. Danto - 1991 - University of California Press.
    Since 1984, when he became art critic for _The Nation_, Arthur C. Danto, one of America's most inventive and influential philosophers, has also emerged as one of our most important critics of art. As an essayist, Danto's style is at once rigorous, incisive, and playful. _Encounters and Reflections_ brings together many of his recent critical writings—on artists such as Andy Warhol, David Hockney, and Robert Mapplethorpe; and on the significance of issues like the masterpiece and the museum. The (...)
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  23.  19
    Arthur Danto E o problema da interpretação de obras de arte.Debora Pazetto Ferreira - 2018 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 59 (139):93-108.
    RESUMO A definição de arte desenvolvida por Arthur Danto pressupõe que algo é uma obra de arte por ser o correlato de uma interpretação, inscrita em uma rede de significações históricas, teóricas e sociais, que lhe atribui o estatuto de obra de arte. Trata-se de uma definição essencialista que, no entanto, não se funda em algo que é percebido no objeto, mas no objeto percebido como arte. Levando em consideração que o conceito de “interpretação” é um dos pontos cardinais (...)
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  24. Beauty Matters.Peg Zeglin Brand (ed.) - 2000 - Indiana University Press.
    Beauty has captured human interest since before Plato, but how, why, and to whom does beauty matter in today's world? Whose standard of beauty motivates African Americans to straighten their hair? What inspires beauty queens to measure up as flawless objects for the male gaze? Why does a French performance artist use cosmetic surgery to remake her face into a composite of the master painters' version of beauty? How does beauty culture perceive the disabled (...)
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  25.  79
    Art, essence, history, and beauty: A reply to carrier, a response to Higgins.Arthur C. Danto - 1996 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 54 (3):284-287.
  26.  46
    Art on the Edge and over: Searching for Art's Meaning in Contemporary Society, 1970s-1990s.Linda Weintraub, Arthur C. Danto & Thomas Mcevilley - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (4):412-414.
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  27.  11
    The Body/Body Problem: Selected Essays.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1999 - University of California Press.
    The overall subject of the essays in _The Body/Body Problem_ is the traditional one of what our ultimate makeup is, as creatures with minds and bodies. The central thesis is that we are beings who represent—and misrepresent—actual and possible worlds. Addressing philosophical questions of mental representation, Danto presents his distinctive approach to some of the most enduring topics in philosophy. He is concerned with the nature of description, the status of the external world, action theory, the philosophy of history, and (...)
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  28. Naturalism.Arthur C. Danto - 1967 - In Paul Edwards, The Encyclopedia of philosophy. New York,: Macmillan. pp. 5--448.
     
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  29.  28
    Unnatural Wonders: Essays from the Gap Between Art and Life.Arthur Coleman Danto - 2007 - Columbia University Press.
    Arthur C. Danto's essays not only critique bodies of work but reflect upon art's conceptual evolution as well, drawing for the reader a kind of "philosophical map" indicating how art and the criteria for judging it has changed over the twentieth century. In _Unnatural Wonders_ the renowned critic finds himself at a point when contemporary art has become wholly pluralistic, even chaotic-with one medium as good as another-and when the moment for the "next thing" has already passed. So (...)
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  30. Persons.Arthur C. Danto - 1967 - In Paul Edwards, The Encyclopedia of philosophy. New York,: Macmillan. pp. 6--110.
     
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  31.  19
    Belleza en vez de cenizas.Arthur C. Danto - 2003 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 27:9-24.
    A partir de Dada y Duchamp, el arte moderno ha puesto en cuestión la necesidad de que la belleza sea un componente esencial del arte. Por tanto, la estética, cuyo tema central es la belleza, ha de cederle el lugar a la filosofía del arte, desde cuya perspectiva la belleza se muestra como una de tantas posibilidades de la creación artística contemporánea.
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  32. Prudence, History, Time and Truth.Arthur C. Danto - 2004 - In David Carr, Thomas Robert Flynn & Rudolf A. Makkreel, The Ethics of History. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press. pp. 76--88.
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  33. Afterword.Arthur C. Danto - 1993 - In Mark Rollins, Danto and His Critics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 313–315.
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  34.  13
    Replies to Essays.Arthur C. Danto - 1993 - In Mark Rollins, Danto and His Critics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 283–311.
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  35.  75
    American beauty.Anthony Graybosch - 2002 - Acta Analytica 17 (2):133-150.
    Kant’s approach to the nature of artworks suggests that art has a metaphysical dimension that accounts for the two major elements of aesthetic experience. Aesthetic judgements are occasioned by experiences of pleasure and have an objective aspect since they are experiences with which other persons are expected to agree. More recently, Arthur Danto has argued that an artwork must be situated in an artworld. Pragmatists see aesthetic experience instead as integral to experience and requiring no special explanation other than (...)
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  36. Beyond the brillo box: the visual arts in post-historical perspective.Arthur Coleman Danto - 1992 - New York: Farrar Straus Giroux.
    In Danto's view, Andy Warhol's Brillo Box was not only a radical attack on traditional definitions of the art work; it brought the history of Western art to a close. In this collection of interconnected essays, he grapples with this and many more of the most challenging issues in art today, from the problems of contemporary pluralism to the dilemmas of censorship and state support for artists.
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  37.  36
    Women's Bodies: Cultural Representations and Identity.Jane Arthurs & Jean Grimshaw - 1999 - Continuum.
    This enlightening book presents new perspectives on how women's bodies are viewed and absorbed in popular culture, and considers some of the ways in which the body is central to questions of women's sexual and other identities.
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  38.  65
    On explanations in history.Arthur C. Danto - 1956 - Philosophy of Science 23 (1):15-30.
    Whether or not history is, or could be, or ought to be a science, depends in part upon how the words “science” and “history” are to be used. But if one of the criteria of a science is an ability to provide explanations of large numbers of events by means of a small number of general laws, it then becomes in part a question of whether or not history does, or can, provide explanations of this sort for the phenomena which (...)
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  39. Internal Beauty.Jonathan Gilmore - unknown
    In the title essay of The Philosophical Disenfranchisement of Art Arthur Danto describes two dominant strains of the philosophy of art in its Platonic beginnings: one that art is dangerous, and thus subject to political censorship or control, and the other that art exists at several removes from the ordinary reality, impotent to effect any meaningful change in the human world.1 These two ways of understanding art, really two charges laid at art’s door, seem contradictory, he writes, until one (...)
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  40.  37
    Historical Language and Historical Reality.Arthur C. Danto - 1973 - Review of Metaphysics 27 (2):219 - 259.
    There is a form of intellectual controversy, exhibited throughout the nineteenth century and into our own, which is less accessible because of a radically different order than certain controversies it appears to resemble, namely those which sprang up dramatically between science and religion in this era. Those latter controversies developed chiefly because it was at first supposed that religion was in possession of factual truths which entailed answers incompatible with those offered by science, to just the same factual questions: the (...)
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  41. (1 other version)Malcolm's conk and Danto's colors; or, four logical petitions concerning race, beauty, and aesthetics.Paul C. Taylor - 1999 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (1):16-20.
  42.  9
    Letter to Posterity.Arthur C. Danto - 2021 - In Lydia Goehr & Jonathan Gilmore, A Companion to Arthur C. Danto. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 397–403.
    Philosophers acquired their designation in ancient times, in consequence of a becoming modesty. Philosophers love cleverness, acuity, fertility in inventing novel arguments, and ingenuity in finding surprising counter‐examples. The great virtues of clarity, concision, and coherence have immunized the profession against the stylistic barbarity of Continental philosophy, which has had a disastrous effect, especially on academic culture, severely limiting the ability of those with advanced education to contribute to the intellectual needs of our society. Wittgenstein felt that no philosophical problem (...)
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  43. Dvakrát nový Arthur Danto. [REVIEW]Tomas Hribek - 1996 - Umění/Art 44:572-577.
    A Czech-language review of two of Arthur Danto's collections of art criticism -- BEYOND THE BRILLO BOX and EMBODIED MEANINGS.
     
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  44. (1 other version)Recent issues have included.Explaining Action, David S. Shwayder, Charles Taylor, David Rayficld, Colin Radford, Joseph Margolis, Arthur C. Danto, James Cargile, K. Robert & B. May - forthcoming - Foundations of Language.
     
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  45.  58
    A New Historiographical Path: Recovering Arthur Danto’s Narrative.Raquel Cascales - 2024 - História da Historiografia International Journal of Theory and History of Historiography 17:1-21.
    This article proposes Arthur Danto’s ‘analytical narrativism,’ and his conceptualization of history as representation, as an unexplored path which can be an alternative to the development of postnarrativism from Hayden White’s ‘figurative realism.’ Danto’s historiographic can shed some light on postnarrativism and on the present-day dilemmas which cloud the academic debates around the writing of history. The article also highlights the need for interdisciplinary dialogue.
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  46.  64
    Arthur C. Danto, Beyond The Brillo Box: The Visual Arts in A Post-Historical Perspective, Mark Tansey: Visions and Revisions.David Carrier & Arthur C. Danto - 1993 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 51 (3):513.
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  47.  19
    Fundamental theory.Arthur Stanley Eddington & Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1946 - Cambridge [Eng.]: The University Press. Edited by E. T. Whittaker.
    Fundamental Theory has been called an "unfinished symphony" and "a challenge to the musicians among natural philosophers of the future". This book, written in 1944 but left unfinished because Eddington died too soon, proved to be his final effort at a vision for harmonization of quantum physics and relativity. The work is less connected and internally integrated than 'Protons and Electrons' while representing a later point in the author's thought arc. The really interested student should read both books together.The physical (...)
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  48. Basic Actions and Basic Concepts.Arthur C. Danto - 1979 - Review of Metaphysics 32 (3):471 - 485.
    THE CONCEPT of basic action rests upon a not especially controversial observation and a standard sort of philosophical argument. The observation is that there occur a great many actions in which what is said to be done—say a—is not done directly but rather through the agent doing something b, distinct from a, which causes a to happen. Thus I move a stone by pushing against it, and the pushing, itself an action, causes the locomotion of the stone when all relevant (...)
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  49. (1 other version)Philosophy as/and/of Literature.Arthur C. Danto - 1984 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 58 (1):5 - 20.
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  50.  20
    Fundamental theory.Arthur Stanley Eddington & Edmund Taylor Whittaker - 1946 - Cambridge [Eng.]: The University Press. Edited by E. T. Whittaker.
    Fundamental Theory has been called an "unfinished symphony" and "a challenge to the musicians among natural philosophers of the future". This book, written in 1944 but left unfinished because Eddington died too soon, proved to be his final effort at a vision for harmonization of quantum physics and relativity. The work is less connected and internally integrated than 'Protons and Electrons' while representing a later point in the author's thought arc. The really interested student should read both books together.The physical (...)
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