Fr. 179.00

Film, Art, and the Limits of Science - In Defence of Humanistic Explanation

English · Hardback

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Description

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There is currently a vigorous debate in film studies and related disciplines about the extent to which scientific paradigms like evolutionary psychology and neuroscience can explain the cinema and other artforms. This debate tends to devolve into extreme positions, with many film scholars and other humanists insisting that science has little or no role to play in the study of the arts, while a minority contends that it is always needed to fully account for cultural phenomena like film.
Malcolm Turvey advocates for a more moderate position. He argues that, while the sciences can explain much about film and the other arts, there is much about these phenomena that only humanistic methods can account for. He thereby mounts a trenchant defence of the purpose and value of humanistic explanation, one that nevertheless acknowledges and welcomes the legitimate contribution of the sciences to the study of the arts.

List of contents

Introduction Moderate Autonomism and Serious Pessimism.- Wittgenstein, Science, and Moderate Autonomism.- Moderate Autonomism, Extreme Autonomism, and Anti-Autonomism.- Norms, Normativity, and the Internal Perspective.- Serious Pessimism and Evolutionary Psychology.- Serious Pessimism and Mirror Neurons.- Conclusion The Limits of Science.

About the author










Malcolm Turvey is Sol Gittleman Professor in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Tufts University and was the founding Director (2015-2021) of Tufts' Film & Media Studies Program. He is also an editor of the journal October.


Summary

There is currently a vigorous debate in film studies and related disciplines about the extent to which scientific paradigms like evolutionary psychology and neuroscience can explain the cinema and other artforms. This debate tends to devolve into extreme positions, with many film scholars and other humanists insisting that science has little or no role to play in the study of the arts, while a minority contends that it is always needed to fully account for cultural phenomena like film.
Malcolm Turvey advocates for a more moderate position. He argues that, while the sciences can explain much about film and the other arts, there is much about these phenomena that only humanistic methods can account for. He thereby mounts a trenchant defence of the purpose and value of humanistic explanation, one that nevertheless acknowledges and welcomes the legitimate contribution of the sciences to the study of the arts.

Product details

Authors Malcolm Turvey
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 02.06.2025
 
EAN 9783031832345
ISBN 978-3-0-3183234-5
No. of pages 311
Dimensions 148 mm x 21 mm x 210 mm
Weight 520 g
Illustrations XVII, 311 p. 7 illus., 1 illus. in color.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries

Kunsttheorie, Kulturwissenschaften, Visual Culture, Philosophie Ästhetik, Philosophy of Art, Evolutionary Psychology, Theory of Arts, Mirror neurons, Film Philosophy, cognitive film theory, film and cognition

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