Aristotle thought that phantasia (imagination), perception, and mind were equally important. In one of his works, Aristotle described imagination as “that virtue of which an image occurs in us.” (De Anima iii 3 – 428aa1-2) The notion of what Cicero called “the mind's eye” has recently been researched quite extensively as a “transdisciplinary project” in a solid and elegant collection of essays entitled Imagination and Art: Explorations in Contemporary Theory (2020) edited by Keith Moser and Ananta Ch. Sukla, who worked with an eclectic group of International researchers to compile a comprehensive study of the various facets of imagination. Organized in nine parts and presenting 38 essays, this collection is the most comprehensive contributi...
Terry Marks-Tarlow interprets mythology and science as endless curiosity about the workings of the U...
This is a marvelous book, but readers – take a hard look at the title and beware. I reckon it is a ...
The contribution is a critical review of Jonathan Gilmore's "Apt Imaginings. Feelings for Fictions a...
Review of Moser, Keith, and Ananta Ch. Sukla (eds). Imagination and Art: Explorations in Contemporar...
This engrossing interdisciplinary collection, edited by French studies Professor Keith Moser and Cen...
[Extract] Idolatry is the worship of false gods. According to Wayne Cristaudo’s magnificent disquisi...
At the time in which quantum mechanics engages in talks of multiverses and quantum technologies help...
Although it purports to tell a cohesive story, this book is really a series of digressive discussion...
In the global Covid-19 pandemic aftermath comes Keith Moser's transdisciplinary project in which the...
Tasos ZEMBYLAS and Claudia DÜRR trace the emergence of prose texts. By analyzing three case studies ...
Book review for Thinking About Art, Edmund Burke Feldman, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1985
Book synopsis: This book is about metaphor, imaginativeness, and criticism of the arts. Since the ea...
This review focuses on the cognitive implications of Alfred Gell’s book, Art and Agency. From the st...
The Creative Imagination: Enlightenment to Romanticism (James Engell) (Reviewed by Ralph Cohen, Univ...
In demonstrating a kind of thinking that lies beyond our customary practices, Michel Foucault (1970)...
Terry Marks-Tarlow interprets mythology and science as endless curiosity about the workings of the U...
This is a marvelous book, but readers – take a hard look at the title and beware. I reckon it is a ...
The contribution is a critical review of Jonathan Gilmore's "Apt Imaginings. Feelings for Fictions a...
Review of Moser, Keith, and Ananta Ch. Sukla (eds). Imagination and Art: Explorations in Contemporar...
This engrossing interdisciplinary collection, edited by French studies Professor Keith Moser and Cen...
[Extract] Idolatry is the worship of false gods. According to Wayne Cristaudo’s magnificent disquisi...
At the time in which quantum mechanics engages in talks of multiverses and quantum technologies help...
Although it purports to tell a cohesive story, this book is really a series of digressive discussion...
In the global Covid-19 pandemic aftermath comes Keith Moser's transdisciplinary project in which the...
Tasos ZEMBYLAS and Claudia DÜRR trace the emergence of prose texts. By analyzing three case studies ...
Book review for Thinking About Art, Edmund Burke Feldman, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1985
Book synopsis: This book is about metaphor, imaginativeness, and criticism of the arts. Since the ea...
This review focuses on the cognitive implications of Alfred Gell’s book, Art and Agency. From the st...
The Creative Imagination: Enlightenment to Romanticism (James Engell) (Reviewed by Ralph Cohen, Univ...
In demonstrating a kind of thinking that lies beyond our customary practices, Michel Foucault (1970)...
Terry Marks-Tarlow interprets mythology and science as endless curiosity about the workings of the U...
This is a marvelous book, but readers – take a hard look at the title and beware. I reckon it is a ...
The contribution is a critical review of Jonathan Gilmore's "Apt Imaginings. Feelings for Fictions a...