Results for ' action art'

979 found
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  1.  18
    Action, Art, History: Engagements with Arthur C. Danto.Daniel Alan Herwitz & Michael Kelly (eds.) - 2007 - Columbia University Press.
    Arthur C. Danto is unique among philosophers for the breadth of his philosophical mind, his eloquent writing style, and the generous spirit embodied in all his work. Any collection of essays on his philosophy has to engage him on all these levels, because this is how he has always engaged the world, as a philosopher and person. In this volume, renowned philosophers and art historians revisit Danto's theories of art, action, and history, and the depth of his innovation as (...)
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  2.  15
    Education as a pharmakon. Action art as political pedagogic device for enacting radical democracy.Guerra Luis - 2023 - Ethics and Education 18 (3-4):371-386.
    By considering the position of education as a pharmakon, highlighting its potential positive and negative effects on societies by its technical unfolding, the article proposes to explore the political and pedagogical role that public and collective performances can have within the public sphere as political devices for promoting and enacting radical democracy. To this end, it analyzes a contemporary collaborative artistic practice, the performance ‘Un Violador en Tu Camino’ (‘A rapist in your path’) by the feminist collective LASTESIS from Chile, (...)
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  3.  29
    Emote aloud during learning with AutoTutor: Applying the Facial Action Coding System to cognitive–affective states during learning.Scotty D. Craig, Sidney D'Mello, Amy Witherspoon & Art Graesser - 2008 - Cognition and Emotion 22 (5):777-788.
    In an attempt to discover the facial action units for affective states that occur during complex learning, this study adopted an emote-aloud procedure in which participants were recorded as they verbalised their affective states while interacting with an intelligent tutoring system (AutoTutor). Participants’ facial expressions were coded by two expert raters using Ekman's Facial Action Coding System and analysed using association rule mining techniques. The two expert raters received an overall kappa that ranged between.76 and.84. The association rule (...)
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  4. Action, Art, History: Engagements with Arthur C. Danto: Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Michalle Gal - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):105-107.
  5. Stain removal: On race and ethics.Art Massara - 2007 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 33 (4):498-528.
    What role does race play in the moral judgment of character? None, ideally, philosophers insist, contending that the proper assessment of an action requires that we disregard any social values associated with the body performing it. What rightly comes under evaluation, they assert, is the neutral, abstract deed irrespective of the race of the agent. Only under these conditions, presumably, can we gauge true moral worth. Reading together Immanuel Kant and Frantz Fanon on ethics and race, I propose instead (...)
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  6. The arts of action.C. Thi Nguyen - 2020 - Philosophers' Imprint 20 (14):1-27.
    The theory and culture of the arts has largely focused on the arts of objects, and neglected the arts of action – the “process arts”. In the process arts, artists create artifacts to engender activity in their audience, for the sake of the audience’s aesthetic appreciation of their own activity. This includes appreciating their own deliberations, choices, reactions, and movements. The process arts include games, urban planning, improvised social dance, cooking, and social food rituals. In the traditional object arts, (...)
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  7.  93
    Art, Action and Ambiguity.Marx W. Wartofsky - 1974 - The Monist 58 (2):327-338.
    The title of this paper is intended to evoke several connotations. Since it will doubtless fail to do so, let me confess them explicitly and artlessly. First, the trinitarian character of the title suggests my debt to the dialectical tradition, from Hegel and Marx to Peirce and Dewey. Second, the alliterative character of the title indicates my debt to Nelson Goodman, perpetrator of the most alarming alliterations allowed in contemporary philosophy. In fact, the text of my sermon can be found (...)
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  8.  18
    Ecologies: Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman.Mark Dion, Peter Fend, Dan Peterman, Stephanie Smith & David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art - 2001 - University of Chicago David & Alfred.
    Since the 1960s, many artists have incorporated ecological concerns into their work, an endeavor that has required new strategies in art-making. To explore recent American manifestations of these interests, the David and Alfred Smart Museum commissioned new projects from artists Mark Dion, Peter Fend, and Dan Peterman, each focusing on interrelationships between particular organisms—human beings-and a specific group of sites—a museum building, a river landscape, and a university campus. The results, exhibited at the Smart Museum during the summer of 2000, (...)
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  9.  78
    Art in Action: Toward a Christian Aesthetic.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (2):209-210.
  10.  8
    Reclaiming art in the age of artifice: a treatise, critique, and call to action.J. F. Martel - 2015 - Berkeley, California: Evolver Editions.
    Draws on examples ranging from prehistoric cave art to modern pop music to discuss the nature and purpose of art and its use by powerful social and cultural forces.
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  11.  8
    The art of somatic coaching: embodying skillful action, wisdom, and compassion.Richard Strozzi-Heckler - 2014 - Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books.
    The Art of Somatic Coaching introduces the concepts and principles of coaching with practices that include body awareness, bodywork, and mindfulness for both the coach and the client. Author and expert coach, Richard Strozzi-Heckler, PhD, explains that in order to achieve truly sustainable changes in individuals, teams, and organizations, it is necessary to implement body-oriented somatic practices in order to dissolve habits, behaviors, and interpretations of the world that are no longer relevant. He explains that these ways of being are (...)
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  12.  22
    Choreography and Ceremony: The Artful Side of Action.Wendy James - 2007 - Human Affairs 17 (2):129-137.
    Choreography and Ceremony: The Artful Side of Action "Actions" are normally thought of as taken by individuals. But to understand their quality, it is not enough to classify them from the perspective of individual psychology (rational vs. emotional, technical vs. artistic, etc.). We need to grasp their relation to those forms of collective life which have a historical existence independent of specific individual action (institutions, the conventions of social gathering, the organizing principles of games, architecture, music, ritual, etc.). (...)
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  13. The Action Aspect of Art: On Explanation in Criticism.Johan Wrede - 1980 - In Lars Aagaard-Mogensen & Göran Hermerén (eds.), Contemporary aesthetics in Scandinavia. Lund: Doxa. pp. 133--46.
     
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  14.  14
    Action, Perception, and Art.Harold N. Lee - 1970 - Tulane Studies in Philosophy 19:55-63.
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  15. Artistic actions for sustainability in contemporary art exhibition.Ásthildur Jónsdóttir & Chrystalla Antoniou - 2018 - In Inger J. Birkeland (ed.), Cultural sustainability and the nature-culture interface: livelihoods, policies, and methodologies. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, earthscan from Routledge.
     
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  16.  4
    Art and the Life of Action.Max Eastman - 1935 - International Journal of Ethics 45 (4):482-484.
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  17. Action, Perception, and Art.Harold Lee - 1970 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 1 (3):85-90.
  18.  18
    Action, Perception, and Art.Harold N. Lee - 1970 - Tulane Studies in Philosophy 19:55-63.
  19.  13
    Art and the language of action.Jack Pustilnik - 1968 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 28 (4):591-595.
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  20.  29
    L'art en action: De quelques ontologies précaires.Jean-Pierre Cometti - 2005 - Philosophiques 32 (1):220-224.
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  21.  32
    The Japanese Arts and Meditation‐in‐Action.Harris Wiseman - 2022 - Zygon 57 (3):744-771.
    The Japanese arts (dō) provide a rigorous, ritual-like set of structures which involve moral and aesthetic training, as well as providing techniques for body-mind synchronization (constituting as such: meditation-in-action). The article explores the links between the Japanese arts and Zen Buddhist ideals (particularly Sōtō Zen) of enlightenment being nothing other than the consistent practice of one's art. Japanese archery (kyudō) will be highlighted to illustrate this, as will the Japanese lifelong learning philosophy (shugyō). The article concludes by bringing into (...)
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  22.  34
    Free action, social institutions, and the definition of 'art'.Edward Sankowski - 1980 - Philosophical Studies 37 (1):67 - 79.
  23.  41
    Art and the Life of Action. Max Eastman.Alain Locke - 1935 - International Journal of Ethics 45 (4):482-484.
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  24.  17
    Actions and Decisions: Pragmatism Gateway to Artful Analytic Management Philosophizing.Pierre Guillet de Monthoux - 2017 - Philosophy of Management 16 (3):279-290.
    How management philosophy is conceived depends on if pragmatism is acknowledged or not! After having been under the main domination of management science both research and education has until recently widened its scope from a decision-making to an action-perspective. It seems to be a recent reconnection to pragmatism that makes the 2011 Carnegie report propose to rethink management in liberal arts terms, whilst the vastly influential 1959 Carnegie Pierson report distanced itself from American pragmatism thus focusing on decisions and (...)
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  25.  25
    Nicholas Wolterstorff, Art in Action: Toward a Christian Aesthetic, William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1980.Lambert Zuidervaart - 1983 - Philosophia Reformata 48 (1):87-90.
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  26. Liberating Biblical Study: Scholarship, Art, and Action in Honor of the Center and Library for the Bible and Social Justice, Vol. 1.[author unknown] - 2011
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  27.  30
    Art is Action. A Discussion of Nine Arts in a Modern World. [REVIEW]I. E. - 1940 - Journal of Philosophy 37 (7):192-193.
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  28. Art and the Life of Action. By Alain Locke. [REVIEW]Max Eastman - 1934 - International Journal of Ethics 45:482.
     
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  29.  54
    Movement and action in the performing arts.Haig Khatchadourian - 1978 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 37 (1):25-36.
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  30.  32
    On Consumerism, Collective Action, and Whether Art Teaches Anything.Claudia W. Ruitenberg - 2014 - Educational Theory 64 (2):179-194.
    In this review essay, Claudia Ruitenberg discusses Trevor Norris's Consuming Schools, René Arcilla's Mediumism, and Martha Nussbaum's Not for Profit. While the primary focus of each book is different — with Norris concentrating on the pressures of consumerism and commercialism on K–12 schooling, Arcilla analyzing modernist art and existentialist education, and Nussbaum emphasizing the role of the humanities in educating for democratic citizenship — each of the books in some way addresses the question of how people can be educated to (...)
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  31. Emotion, understating and action in works of art.Franco Chiereghin - 2011 - Verifiche: Rivista Trimestrale di Scienze Umane 40 (1-3):63-121.
     
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  32.  22
    Art and the Life of Action. With Other Essays. [REVIEW]I. E. - 1935 - Journal of Philosophy 32 (4):104-105.
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  33. An Action Research Exploration Integrating Student Choice and Arts Activities in a Sixth.Courtney Kosky - 2008 - Journal of Social Studies Research 32 (1):1.
  34.  17
    De l'Action painting à la mort de l'art : à propos de Jackson Pollock.Laurent Van Eynde - 1995 - Philosophiques 22 (2):281-296.
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  35. Thought and action in the art of dance.David Carr - 1987 - British Journal of Aesthetics 27 (4):345-357.
  36.  24
    (In)visible Actions – Disruptive Practices: Art and Philosophy in the ČSSR 1950–1980.Hana Gründler - 2024 - Journal of Social and Political Philosophy 3 (1):67-84.
    It is not well known that in the context of the unofficial artistic and philosophical scene of the ČSSR there was an aesthetically refined and theoretically differentiated reflection on the different degrees and limits of visibility as well as a rethinking of participation – be it aesthetic, epistemic or political. In this paper I first investigate the relation between history and (in)visibility in its broadest sense: questions such as ‘whose history is present’ and ‘what visual memory building strategies are used’ (...)
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  37.  27
    A Modest Art: Securing Privacy in Technologically Mediated Homecare.Ike Kamphof - 2017 - Foundations of Science 22 (2):411-419.
    This article addresses the art of living in a technological culture as the active engagement with technomoral change. It argues that this engagement does not just take the form of overt deliberation. It shows in more modest ways as reflection-in-action, an experimental process in which new technology is fitted into existing practices. In this process challenged values are re-articulated in pragmatic solutions to the problem of working with new technology. This art of working with technology is also modest in (...)
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  38. Nicholas Wolterstorff, Art in Action[REVIEW]T. Martland - 1982 - Philosophy in Review 2:44-46.
  39.  50
    Cicéron. Discours. Seconde action contre Verrès, livre quatrième: Les oeuvres d'art. Henri Bornecque et Gaston Rabaud. Pp. xxv + 198. Société d'Édition 'Les Belles Lettres,' 1927. [REVIEW]J. B. Poynton - 1928 - The Classical Review 42 (01):42-.
  40. Art and intention: a philosophical study.Paisley Livingston - 2005 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In Art and intention Paisley Livingston develops a broad and balanced perspective on perennial disputes between intentionalists and anti-intentionalists in philosophical aesthetics and critical theory. He surveys and assesses a wide range of rival assumptions about the nature of intentions and the status of intentionalist psychology. With detailed reference to examples from diverse media, art forms, and traditions, he demonstrates that insights into the multiple functions of intentions have important implications for our understanding of artistic creation and authorship, the ontology (...)
  41.  14
    Les surprises du "Phoranomus": L'art d'inventer, le principe d'action, et la dynamique.André Robinet - 1989 - Les Etudes Philosophiques:171.
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  42.  28
    Knowledge in action: what the feet can learn to know.Katja Pettinen - 2022 - Semiotica 2022 (248):227-250.
    This article deploys Peircean approach to bodily skills, foregrounding motricity as a semiotically mediated and a “suprasubjective” process. By examining two contrasting skills – javelin and martial arts – I draw out the relevance of dynamic movement to the semiotics of sport and embodiment. These contrasting movements expose different epistemological assumptions since they emerge in distinct cultural traditions. To attend to the cultural dimension of movement practices – including the mediation of signs making certain movement forms seem reasonable or desirable (...)
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  43.  9
    Art in Action: Toward a Christian Aesthetic. [REVIEW]F. David Martin - 1982 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 16 (1):114.
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  44.  14
    Takedown: art and power in the digital age.Farah Nayeri - 2022 - New York: Astra House.
    Farah Nayeri addresses the difficult questions plaguing the art world, from the bad habits of Old Masters, to the current grappling with identity politics. For centuries, art censorship has been a top-down phenomenon--kings, popes, and one-party states decided what was considered obscene, blasphemous, or politically deviant in art. Today, censorship can also happen from the bottom-up, thanks to calls to action from organizers and social media campaigns. Artists and artworks are routinely taken to task for their insensitivity. In this (...)
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  45.  76
    Art, truth and vocation: Validity and disclosure in Heidegger’s anti-aesthetics.Lambert Zuidervaart - 2002 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 28 (2):153-172.
    A central point of contention between Critical Theory and Heideggerian thinking concerns the question of truth. Whereas Martin Heidegger orients his conception of truth towards the ongoing disclosure of Being, Jürgen Habermas regards truth as one dimension of validity in 'communicative action'. Unlike Habermas, who usually emphasizes validity at the expense of disclosure, Heidegger tends to emphasize disclosure at the expense of validity. The essay uses Heidegger's 'The Origin of the Work of Art' as its point of departure. While (...)
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  46. Works and worlds of art.Nicholas Wolterstorff - 1980 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In this book the author treats art as an action performed by the artist as agent, rather than examining it from the point of view of its audience as ...
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  47.  30
    Visual exploration patterns of human figures in action: an eye tracker study with art paintings.Daniela Villani, Francesca Morganti, Pietro Cipresso, Simona Ruggi, Giuseppe Riva & Gabriella Gilli - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
  48.  17
    Arts of Invention and Arts of Memory: Creation and Criticism.Richard McKeon - 1975 - Critical Inquiry 1 (4):723-739.
    The arts of poetry and the arts of criticism are uncovered and studied in their products, in poems and in judgments. Poetry and criticism, however, the making and judging of poems, are processes. The study of literature as a product - existing poems and existing interpretations and appreciations of poetry - develops a body of knowledge which is sometimes called "poetic sciences." The recognition and use of poetic and critical processes - producing and judging poems which did not previously exist, (...)
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  49.  26
    Creative Arts and Experiences in Palliative Care.Maria José dos Santos Cunha & Manuel Luís Capelas - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (2):87-102.
    In this article, we present a work developed with palliative patients with the aim of, through art, enabling them to find answers that would help them overcome situations that kept them involved in thoughts, fears, and anxiety that consumed their energy, joy, and will to live. For this purpose, we used a qualitative methodology —research-action— and the attained results revealed how arts can be useful to these patients by providing them, through the work they have developed, with an improvement (...)
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  50.  61
    Action And Character In Dostoyevsky'S Notes From Underground.Julia Annas - 1977 - Philosophy and Literature 1 (3):257-275.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Julia Annas ACTION AND CHARACTER IN DOSTOYEVSKY'S NOTES FROM UNDERGROUND Notes from Underground was written with a specific purpose in mind: to answer Chernyshevsky's novel What Is to Be Done?1 And many features of Dostoyevsky's work can only be understood when we bear in mind its specifically Russian setting. The narrator is a romantic idealist of the forties transformed into something rather different by 1864, and no doubt (...)
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