Results for ' WILDERNESS AESTHETICS'

995 found
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  1.  25
    Installation Art and the Question of Aesthetic Autonomy: Juliane Rebentisch and the Beholder’s Share.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (3):351-356.
    Intermedial art, as it emerged in the 1960s and 70s, constituted a threat not only to the medium specificity of modernism, but to the artwork as self-contained autonomous object. Both supporters and critics of intermedia drew a contrast between, on the one hand, modernism’s aesthetic engagement with a medium-specific ‘object’, and on the other new non-aesthetic ‘practices’ engaging the ‘literal spectator’ within her own space, such that the space of the gallery is drawn into the situational encounter. In her 2003/12 (...)
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  2.  71
    Michael Fried and beholding video art.Ken Wilder - unknown
    In this paper, I consider Michael Fried’s recent contribution to the debate around the experience of video art, made in relation to the work of Douglas Gordon. Fried speculates that issues of antitheatricality may in fact be key to specifying the medium of video installation. While Fried’s position offers a useful way of framing the relation with the beholder in video art, in a way that pointedly moves beyond tautological notions of activating spectatorship, I question how theatricality is to be (...)
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  3.  34
    Architecture as performance: Sigurd Lewerentz's uncut bricks.Ken Wilder - 2021 - Aesthetic Investigations 5 (1):28-50.
    Might architecture be reconceived as a form of performance? I draw upon Nelson Goodman’s writing on architecture—including his account of architectural notation—and David Davies’s performance theory, which claims that artworks should be considered not as products made by generative performances, but rather as the performances themselves. I tie the exemplification that Goodman identifies as the primary way architectural works ‘mean’ to the role of the architectural ‘score’, recast not as a mere ‘constraint’ but as integral to the creative processes by (...)
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  4.  9
    The Configurational Encounter and the problematic of Beholding.Ken Wilder - 2018 - In Malcolm Quinn, Dave Beech, Michael Lehnert, Carol Tulloch & Stephen Wilson (eds.), The Persistence of Taste: Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu.
    This is a peer reviewed chapter in the book The Persistence of Taste: Art, Museums and Everyday Life After Bourdieu, an interdisciplinary analysis of taste in the wake of Pierre Bourdieu’s sociology. The chapter, ‘The configurational encounter and the problematic of beholding’, is in Part I of the book, entitled ‘Taste and Art’. Engaging the aesthetics of reception as its field of inquiry, the chapter draws upon the literary theorist Wolfgang Iser’s notion of the ‘blank’ as a staged suspension (...)
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  5. The case for an external spectator.Ken Wilder - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (3):261-277.
    I question the assumption that painting always presents a self-contained world. I use Masaccio’s Trinity to claim that in certain works, integrated into their architectural settings, the internal onlooker is fused with the external spectator. Here the imaginative engagement is situated. I highlight differences afforded internal and external spectators: with the former, the viewer identifies with a spectator who already occupies an unrepresented extension of the ‘virtual’ space; with the latter, the beholder enters that part of the fictive world depicted (...)
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  6.  2
    Michael Fried and Beholding Video Art.Ken Wilder - 2011 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 49 (1):5.
    In this paper, I consider Michael Fried’s recent contribution to the debate around the experience of video art, made in relation to the work of Douglas Gordon. Fried speculates that issues of antitheatricality may in fact be key to specifying the medium of video installation. While Fried’s position offers a useful way of framing the relation with the beholder in video art, in a way that pointedly moves beyond tautological notions of activating spectatorship, I question how theatricality is to be (...)
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  7.  22
    Neither Here Nor Elsewhere: Displacement Devices in Representing the Supernatural.Ken Wilder - 2011 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):46-62.
    How might the supernatural be represented in religious paintings that imply continuity between the virtual space of painting and the real space of the beholder? Such an implied continuity might be thought to threaten a necessary distance demanded of religious works. This article examines how a number of Italian paintings employ strategies for representing the supernatural through displacement devices that create a ‘gap’ within perception – an inviolable space that is implied as being outside normal spatiotemporal relations. The contention is (...)
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  8.  4
    Neither Here Nor Elsewhere: Displacement Devices in Representing the Supernatural.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):46.
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  9.  24
    Vermeer: Interruptions, Exclusions, and ‘Imagining Seeing’.Ken Wilder - 2015 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 52 (1):38-59.
    This article proposes an essential interrelatedness of Vermeer’s strategies of inclusion and exclusion of an implied beholder. I will argue that such strategies mutually reinforce each other, to the extent that the plausibility of one is arguably dependent upon the possibility of the other. This is evidenced by Vermeer’s subtle manipulations of pictorial space, and the article traces a decisive shift in his familiar use of barriers from those aimed at an external presence to those oriented towards an internal beholder. (...)
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  10.  3
    Vermeer: Interruptions, Exclusions, and ‘Imagining Seeing’.Ken Wilder - 2020 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 52 (1):38.
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  11. Babes in the Woods: Wilderness Aesthetics in Children's Stories and Toys, 1830-1915.Donna Varga - 2009 - Society and Animals 17 (3):187-205.
    Representations of nonhuman wild animals in children's stories and toys underwent dramatic transformation over the years 1830-1915. During the earlier part of that period, wild animals were presented to children as being savage and dangerous, and that it was necessary for them to be killed or brutally constrained. In the 1890s, an animalcentric discourse emerged in Nature writing, along with an animal-human symbiosis in scientific child study that highlighted childhood innocence, resulting in a valuing of wild animals based upon their (...)
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  12.  28
    Park Aesthetics Between Wilderness Representations and Everyday Affordances.Tea Lobo - 2023 - British Journal of Aesthetics 63 (3):369-380.
    Scholars criticize privileging aesthetics over social and ecological considerations in park design. I argue that the real culprit is not aesthetics, but aestheticism. Aestheticism treats aesthetic objects as if they were ontologically distinct from everyday objects. Aestheticism in park design—treating parks like artworks to be admired like paintings—dovetails into treating parks like representations of a romanticized wilderness: of pristine, untouched landscapes. I argue that aestheticism is a means of constructing an ontological distinction between the beholder and the (...)
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  13.  8
    Aesthetic and ethical issues concerning sport in Wilder places.Alan P. Dougherty - 2007 - In M. J. McNamee (ed.), Philosophy, Risk, and Adventure Sports. London ;Routledge. pp. 94--105.
  14.  28
    The Re-Enchantment of Wilderness and Urban Aesthetics.Wang-Heng Chen & Xin-yu Chen - 2020 - Environmental Ethics 42 (3):213-221.
    According to the essence of industrial civilization, wilderness is bound to disenchantment. However, in the ecological civilization era, based on the demands of ecological balance, we must reserve a certain degree of wilderness in urban environment. Therefore, we need to bring back enchantment to aesthetic appreciation of wilderness. On the surface, the re-enchantment of wilderness seems to be a regression of agricultural civilization; however, in fact, it is a transcendental development of agricultural civilization. In recent years, (...)
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  15.  10
    Between Wilderness and Civilization: Bodies, Gesture, and the Aesthetics of Representational Subtraction.Peter Andrew Williams - 1997 - Symploke 5 (1):73-94.
  16. Aesthetics and environment: Variations on a theme.Arnold Berleant - 2005 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    I: Environmental aesthetics -- A phenomenological aesthetics of environment -- Aesthetic dimensions of environmental design -- Down the garden path -- The wilderness city : a study of metaphorical experience -- Aesthetics of the coastal environment -- The world from the water -- Is there life in virtual space? -- Is greasy lake a place? -- Embodied music -- II: Social aesthetics -- The idea of a cultural aesthetic -- The social evaluation of art -- (...)
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  17.  15
    Psychical Distance and the Aesthetic Appreciation of Wilderness.Robert W. Loftin - 1986 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 3 (1):15-19.
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  18.  24
    Wilderness in Ancient Chinese Landscape Painting.LuYang Chen & Ziao Chen - 2020 - Environmental Ethics 42 (3):253-266.
    Chinese painting is dominated by landscape painting, which is a unique form of artistic expression for Chinese people, while landscape generally refers to nature. Wild natural landscape can be called “wilderness,” which embodies the vitality and upward vitality of nature, and also contains unique cultural characteristics. “Wilderness” is the most important “original ecological” environment in the natural environment. Its existence has natural, ecological, and aesthetic significance. It is nature in its primitiveness and ecology in its wildness; the aesthetic (...)
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  19.  91
    The Aesthetics of Environment.Arnold Berleant - 1995 - Temple University Press.
    Environmental aesthetics is an emerging discipline that explores the meaning and influence of environmental perception and experience on human life. Arguing for the idea that environment is not merely a setting for people but is fully integrated and continuous with us, The Aesthetics of Environment explores the aesthetic dimensions of the human-environmental continuum in both theoretical terms and concrete situations. From outer space to the museum, from architecture to landscape, from city to countryside to wilderness, this book (...)
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  20.  18
    Nature, Wilderness, and Supreme Goodness.Shan Gao - 2020 - Environmental Ethics 42 (3):237-251.
    Transcendentalism and Confucianism involve different understandinsgs of the concepts of nature, wilderness, and supreme goodness in terms of the metaphysical understanding of nature and how it influences the understanding of human nature. The goodness of Tao is not transcendental as understood by transcendentalism. Rather the goodness of Tao as the important moral values is shaped by human beings’ experience of the natural world. It is this deeper philosophical reason why transcendentalism encourages the aesthetic appreciation of wilderness while Confucianism (...)
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  21.  36
    Rethinking Wilderness.Mark Woods - 2017 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    The concept and values of wilderness, along with the practice of wilderness preservation, have been under attack for the past several decades. In _Rethinking Wilderness_, Mark Woods responds to seven prominent anti-wilderness arguments. Woods offers a rethinking of the received concept of wilderness, developing a positive account of wilderness as a significant location for the other-than-human value-adding properties of naturalness, wildness, and freedom. Interdisciplinary in approach, the book combines environmental philosophy, environmental history, environmental social sciences, (...)
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  22.  22
    Hartman's Contagious Orbit: Reassessing Aesthetic CriticismCriticism in the Wilderness: The Study of Literature TodayDeconstruction and the Question of the TextPsychoanalysis and the Question of the TextSaving the Text: Literature/Derrida/Philosophy. [REVIEW]Alexander Argyros, Jerry Aline Flieger & Geoffrey Hartman - 1987 - Diacritics 17 (1):52.
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  23.  58
    Environmental Aesthetics and Rewilding.Jonathan Prior & Emily Brady - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (1):31-51.
    This paper explores the practice of rewilding and its implications for environmental aesthetic values, qualities and experiences. First, we consider the temporal dimensions of rewilding in regard to the emergence of particular aesthetic qualities over time, and our aesthetic appreciation of these. Second, we discuss how rewilding potentially brings about difficult aesthetic experiences, such as the unscenic and the ugly. Finally, we make progress in critically understanding how rewilding may be understood as a distinctive form of ecological restoration, while resisting (...)
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  24. Feminist Criticism in the Wilderness.Elaine Showalter - 1981 - Critical Inquiry 8 (2):179-205.
    Until very recently, feminist criticism has not had a theoretical basis; it has been an empirical orphan in the theoretical storm. In 1975, I was persuaded that no theoretical manifesto could adequately account for the varied methodologies and ideologies which called themselves feminist reading or writing.1 By the next year, Annette Kolodny had added her observation that feminist literary criticism appeared "more like a set of interchangeable strategies than any coherent school or shared goal orientation."2 Since then, the expressed goals (...)
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  25.  4
    Aesthetics and nature: the appreciation of natural beauty and the environment.Glenn Parsons - 2023 - Dublin, Ireland: Bloomsbury Academic, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
    The appreciation of nature and natural beauty demands our attention as environmental issues become ever more urgent. In this timely introduction, Glenn Parsons provides an overview of philosophical work on the aesthetics of nature, identifying key conceptual questions, clarifying central theories, and analyzing the ethical ramifications of our experience of natural beauty. Outlining five major approaches to understanding the aesthetic value of nature, this second edition explores the aesthetic appreciation of nature as it occurs in wilderness, in gardens, (...)
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  26. The Sublime in Modern Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature.Emily Brady - 2013 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    In The Sublime in Modern Philosophy: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Nature, Emily Brady takes a fresh look at the sublime and shows why it endures as a meaningful concept in contemporary philosophy. In a reassessment of historical approaches, the first part of the book identifies the scope and value of the sublime in eighteenth-century philosophy, nineteenth-century philosophy and Romanticism, and early wilderness aesthetics. The second part examines the sublime's contemporary significance through its relationship to the arts; its position (...)
     
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  27. Aesthetics & Nature.Glenn Parsons - 2008 - London, UK: Continuum Press (Bloomsbury).
    Aesthetics and Nature offers a clear and accessible introduction to the field of nature aesthetics. Glenn Parsons explores the current debates in the field, providing the reader with a thorough overview of the subject. The book situates nature aesthetics in relation to two principal influences: aesthetics' traditional project of understanding the value of art and current thought on the ethics of our relationship with nature. The book outlines five major approaches to understanding the aesthetic value of (...)
     
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  28.  53
    The Philosophical Significance of Wilderness Solitude.Jay Hansford C. Vest - 1987 - Environmental Ethics 9 (4):303-330.
    With the enactment of the Wildemess Act, wildemess solitude has become a major issue in the assessment and designation of wildemess areas. Interpreting this solitude criterion to mean loneliness, federal agencies have judged wildlands according to their “isolation potential.” This perspective is highly inaccurate given the etymological derivation of solitude-“soul-mood.” Wildemess solitude is in fact a communion with wild nature. Philosophically it reflects a wildemess episteme and land aesthetic grounded in organicism. The natural aesthetic categories of Sole-the rare or unique (...)
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  29.  7
    The Philosophical Significance of Wilderness Solitude.Jay Hansford C. Vest - 1987 - Environmental Ethics 9 (4):303-330.
    With the enactment of the Wildemess Act, wildemess solitude has become a major issue in the assessment and designation of wildemess areas. Interpreting this solitude criterion to mean loneliness, federal agencies have judged wildlands according to their “isolation potential.” This perspective is highly inaccurate given the etymological derivation of solitude-“soul-mood.” Wildemess solitude is in fact a communion with wild nature. Philosophically it reflects a wildemess episteme and land aesthetic grounded in organicism. The natural aesthetic categories of Sole-the rare or unique (...)
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  30. Aesthetics and the Value of Nature.Janna Thompson - 1995 - Environmental Ethics 17 (3):291-305.
    Like many environmental philosophers, I find the idea that the beauty of wildernesses makes them valuable in their own right and gives us a moral duty to preserve and protect them to be attractive. However, this appeal to aesthetic value encounters a number of serious problems. I argue that these problems can best be met and overcome by recognizing that the appreciation of natural environments and the appreciation of great works of arts are activities more similar than many people have (...)
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  31.  14
    First Flowers of Our Wilderness.Eugen Neuhaus & James Thomas Flexner - 1950 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 8 (3):202.
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  32. Michael P. Nelson and J. Baird Callicott, eds. The Wilderness Debate Rages On: Continuing the New Great Wilderness Debate[REVIEW]Shane Ralston - 2010 - Philosophy in Review 30 (4):289-292.
    Environmental studies is a highly interdisciplinary field of inquiry, involving philosophers, ecologists, biologists, sociologists, activists, historians and professionals in public and private environmental organizations. It comes with no surprise, then, that the follow-up to Nelson and Callicott’s original anthology The Great Wilderness Debate (1998) features essays from authors in a broad array of disciplines. While there is considerable overlap between the two volumes, this new version offers forty-one essays, five of which are new additions, organized into four sections. What (...)
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  33.  15
    Gender and Sexuality in Stoic Philosophy.Malin Grahn-Wilder - 2018 - New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book investigates the Ancient Stoic thinkers’ views on gender and sexuality. A detailed scrutiny of metaphysics, ethics and political philosophy reveals that the Stoic philosophers held an exceptionally equal view of men and women’s rational capacities. In its own time, Stoicism was frequently called ‘ the manly school’ of philosophy, but this volume shows that the Stoics would have also transformed many traditional notions of masculinity. Malin Grahn-Wilder compares the earlier philosophies of Plato and Aristotle to show that the (...)
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  34.  46
    John dewey’s aesthetic ecology of public intelligence and the grounding of civic environmentalism.Herbert G. Reid & Betsy Taylor - 2003 - Ethics and the Environment 8 (1):74-92.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ethics & the Environment 8.1 (2003) 74-92 [Access article in PDF] John Dewey's Aesthetic Ecology of Public Intelligence and the Grounding of Civic Environmentalism Herbert Reid and Betsy Taylor "[The problem is] that of recovering the continuity of esthetic experience with normal processes of living." John Dewey, Art as Experience "This is not a protest. Repeat. This is not a protest. This is some kind of artistic expression. Over." (...)
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  35.  17
    John Dewey's Aesthetic Ecology of Public Intelligence and the Grounding of Civic Environmentalism.Herbert G. Reid & Betsy Taylor - 2003 - Ethics and the Environment 8 (1):74-92.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ethics & the Environment 8.1 (2003) 74-92 [Access article in PDF] John Dewey's Aesthetic Ecology of Public Intelligence and the Grounding of Civic Environmentalism Herbert Reid and Betsy Taylor "[The problem is] that of recovering the continuity of esthetic experience with normal processes of living." John Dewey, Art as Experience "This is not a protest. Repeat. This is not a protest. This is some kind of artistic expression. Over." (...)
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  36.  22
    Index to The Rice Institute Pamphlet, Volume Fifteen, No. 4, October 1928: The methods of research.Wilder D. Bancroft - unknown
    Three public lectures delivered in the Chemistry Lecture Hall of the Rice Institute, April 9, 10, and 11, 1928, by Wilder D. Bancroft, Ph.D., D.Sc., World War Memorial Professor of Physical Chemistry at Cornell University.
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  37.  30
    Back to Aristotle.Wilder D. Bancroft - unknown
  38.  21
    Milton's Aesthetics of Eating.Denise Gigante - 2000 - Diacritics 30 (2):88-112.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:diacritics 30.2 (2000) 88-112 [Access article in PDF] Milton's Aesthetics Of Eating Denise Gigante It is not a little curious that, with the exception of Ben Jonson (and he did not speak gravely about it so often), the poet in our own country who has written with the greatest gusto on the subject of eating is Milton. He omits none of the pleasures of the palate, great or (...)
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  39.  15
    Mother/nature a skeptical look at the unique naturalness of maternal parenting.Hugh T. Wilder - 1983 - Journal of Social Philosophy 14 (2):1-17.
  40.  26
    Practical Reason and the Logic of Imperatives.Hugh T. Wilder - 1980 - Metaphilosophy 11 (3-4):244--251.
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  41.  18
    Tolerance and teaching philosophy.HughT Wilder - 1978 - Metaphilosophy 9 (3-4):311-323.
  42. God, to be or not to be?: a critical analysis of Monod's scientific materialism.A. E. Wilder-Smith - 1975 - Neuhausen: Hänssler.
     
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  43. Studies of the cerebral cortex of man: a review and an interpretation.Wilder Penfield - 1954 - In J. F. Delafresnaye (ed.), Brain Mechanisms and Consciousness. Blackwell. pp. 284--309.
     
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  44.  8
    Speech, perception and the uncommitted cortex.Wilder Penfield - 1966 - In John C. Eccles (ed.), Brain and Conscious Experience. Springer. pp. 217--237.
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  45.  13
    Superordinate shape classification using natural shape statistics.Manish Singh John Wilder, Jacob Feldman - 2011 - Cognition 119 (3):325.
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  46. Beautiful and sublime: the aesthetics of running in a commodified world.Tim Gorichanaz - 2016 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 43 (3):365-379.
    In the United States, running as a leisure activity continues to grow in popularity. Healthism can explain some of this popularity, but it does not explain ultradistance running. Motivations for running can be seen through the framework of the Kantian beautiful and the sublime. Beauty arises through extrinsic motivation and relates to an economy of form, while the sublime arises through intrinsic motivation and relates to confronting the challenge of infinity. The commercial, casual, and competitive aspects of distance running correspond (...)
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  47.  10
    Photography and Science.Kelley Elizabeth Wilder - 2009 - Reaktion Books.
    How do we know what an amoeba looks like? How can doctors see the details of our skeletons and internal organs? All of these things are made possible through the innovations of photography. The author provides a primer on the applications of photography to science as she explores the multiple facets of this complex relationship.
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  48.  22
    Zoltan Somhegyi: Mother Nature’s Exhibition: On The Origins Of The Aesthetics Of Contemporary Northern Landscapes.Zoltán Somhegyi - 2017 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 25 (52).
    In this article Zoltán Somhegyi investigates the aesthetic qualities of Northern landscape representations, with a special focus on how contemporary examples are connected to classical ones. First he examines the history of the aesthetic appreciation of these sites, starting from their early modern reception and from the differentiation of “Northern” and “Mediterranean” landscapes: while the Mediterranean ones were highly valued already from the 15th–16th centuries on, the “wilder” Northern landscapes were admired mainly from Romanticism onwards. This has, among others, an (...)
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  49.  22
    Introduction to the foundations of mathematics.Raymond Louis Wilder - 1952 - Huntington, N.Y.: R. E. Krieger Pub. Co..
  50.  17
    Interpretative cognitive ethology.Hugh T. Wilder - 1996 - In Colin Allen & D. Jamison (eds.), Readings in Animal Cognition. MIT Press. pp. 29--62.
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