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'In My Mind's Ear': Misconstruing Sounds as Sights – a Philosophical and Cinematical Caution
(1999)
The notion of 'imaging' music ought to perplex us philosophically, for 'to imagine' is a verb of visualisation. Hearing musical events may cause us to imagine things, and seeing things may cause us to think of hearing ...
KING KONG, Carroll and Currie: Misconstruing Monstrously How We See Things by Means of Movies
(1998)
Two confusions have vitiated recent philosophical discussions about filmmaking: the presumption of Nöel Carroll that discrimination entails essentialism and the presumption of both Carroll and Gregory Currie that we cannot ...
Pudovkin's Precept [Summary]: Pudovkin, Kant and the Transcendental Unity of Apperception
(1990)
In 1926, Vsevolod Pudovkin solved the fundamental problem of film design by showing filmmakers how to select and order the parts of a movie (its shots, scenes and sequences of them) to ensure that viewers can perceive ...