mhv said:
Well let's just say that it's not the kind of work that would get you tenured...
Oh that’s the issue : get tenured.
mhv said:
Academic discussions are not about likes or dislikes. You agree, you agree partially, you disagree partially, or you disagree totally.
Thanks, but please relax, I didn't use "like" in a technical sense.
mhv said:
Why would I rely on Kant for aesthetics?
Obviously, you don’t care. Baumgarten, old crap. But Currie, Davies or Wolstertoff (whose work I appreciate btw) are not in the same ballpark as Kant. Where do you study ?
mhv said:
Knowledge about aesthetics means knowledge about topics like the ontology of artworks, the nature of aesthetic experience (if there is one), the role of cognition in appreciation of works of art, what is expressiveness in music, do the art-historical facts about a work of art have any bearing on its artistic value, the moral role of the artist in a society, and all the specific problems associated to either literature, fiction, photography, painting, music, sculpture, or dance.
Thanks for the lecture. So you mean the trivial fact that we blabla about a topic which is art, and you hold that that blabla is knowlegde about this topic. Interesting. The problem is that you’re mixing the issues and you think that all which relates in one way or another to art has someting to do with aesthetics. That's very weak. For instance, the moral role of the artist in a society, is not an aethetic issue, but a sociological one.
Btw I’m so impressed by big words : ontology wow ! Let me put it straight : ontology of artworks is bullsh*t (in H. Frankfurt’s sense). I know it’s trendy to reawaken ontology when contemporary theories have nothing serious to say about art, politics, society, ethics …etc. But it's useless. Well, like Rawls, I try to understand politics without ontology ; like Carnap, I try to understand logics without ontology or metaphysics … etc.
mhv said:
A) Semiotics is founded upon the principles that there is a universal theory of signification, of which language is the paradigmatic example.
Yep, that’s exactly what I understood … again common sense. That’s why I said : « meaning is accessible to rational human being through language ». And that’s why language is, and will remain, the primary paradigm of signification, as Leibniz put it (again I put aside theories of perceptual meaning which don’t concern aesthetics).
mhv said:
B) with respect to the problem of depiction, semiotics considers that the resemblance between a sign and its object explains how marks on paper can depict something. That's Peirce's definition of an iconic sign.
Yep, that’s Pierce’s definition of an iconic sign. So what ? Icons are only one way to produce meaning, or to represente signification, or to derive significance. There are also indices and symbols, which don't "depict" objects by resemblance ; go and read again Pierce. There is no reason to think that photography is only about icon and not symbol. Btw Pierce's theory, as great as it is, is only one semiotic theory. Do you want to discuss iconography vs ideography?
mhv said:
Go read a few things, and you'll see that there are many more competing theories on depiction. There is resemblance between a design on paper and a depicted object; there are various theories of the optical field; there is the seeing-in theory, the paradigm of which is our ability to see a face in the cloud; there are theories of informational content; and myriad other variations. The Routledge Companion to Aesthetics has a few good thing in its article on depiction.
Thanks, I really need a Companion for students.
mhv said:
What I'm saying is simply that Barthes does not think further than "photography is the real thing, not a representation" and that I distrust profundly his image semiotics theory.
Distrust ? No you don’t mean that. You know academic discussions are not about likes or dislikes, trust or distrust. You agree, you agree partially, you disagree partially, or you disagree totally.
Thanks for the lecture. Next time let's talk about photography.
Best,
Marc