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  1. External realism about cinematic motion.Trevor Ponech - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (4):349-368.
    Cinematic motion is, I argue, a genuine and intrinsic property of some cinematic works and not just a matter of how things look to us. It is an event—an item's change of position—happening prior and external to our sensory responses to movies. I therefore defend against common-sense illusionism a minority opinion within cinema studies: that movie viewing normally occasions veridical perceptions of a kind of objective displacement. I also dispute another version of anti-illusionist realism about cinematic motion, the implication that (...)
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  • Imagination, Illusion and Experience in Film.Dominic M. Mciver Lopes - 1998 - Philosophical Studies 89 (2-3):343-353.
  • The illusion of realism in film.Andrew Kania - 2002 - British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (3):243-258.
    Gregory Currie, arguing against recent psychoanalytic and semiotic film theory, has defended various realist theses about film. The strongest of these is that ‘weak illusionism’—the view that the motion of film images is an illusion—is false. That is, Currie believes film images really do move. In this paper I defend the common-sense position of weak illusionism, firstly by showing that Currie underestimates the power of some arguments for it, especially one based on the mechanics of projection, and secondly by showing (...)
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  • Imagination, interpretation, and film.Berys Gaut - 1998 - Philosophical Studies 89 (2-3):331-341.
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  • A Philosophy of Cinematic Art.Berys Gaut - 2010 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    A wide-ranging and accessible study of cinema as an art form, discussing traditional photographic films, digital cinema, and videogames.
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  • Film, reality, and illusion.Gregory Currie - 1996 - In David Bordwell Noel Carroll (ed.), Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 325--44.
     
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  • The film theory that never was: A nervous manifesto.Gregory Currie - 1997 - In Richard Allen & Murray Smith (eds.), Film Theory and Philosophy. Oxford University Press. pp. 42--59.
    This chapter is a manifesto of the film theory of Gregory Currie. He thinks that his work brings a connection between film and cognitive psychology. The chapter begins with a glimpse of an ideal theoretical structure and his opinion on the philosophical background against the manifesto itself. Then the theses and the arguments on film theory and the philosophy of film, moving pictures, convention, intention, and genre, and the viewer is laid out. The description includes an outline of what he (...)
     
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  • Image and Mind: Film, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science.Gregory Currie - 1998 - Philosophical Quarterly 48 (190):127-129.
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  • Image and Mind: Film, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science.Gregory Currie - 1995 - Philosophy 71 (278):617-622.
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