Pictures and their Use in Communication: A Philosophical Essay

Pictures and their Use in Communication: A Philosophical Essay

by David Novitz
Pictures and their Use in Communication: A Philosophical Essay

Pictures and their Use in Communication: A Philosophical Essay

by David Novitz

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1977)

$109.99 
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Overview

Ours is the age of the picture. Pictures abound in our newspapers and magazines, in storybooks and on the glossy pages of instruction manuals. We find them on billboards and postage stamps, on the television screen and in the cinema. And in all of these cases pictures inform us: they explain, they clarify, they elucidate - and at times, too, they entertain and delight us. Images on the television screen have all but replaced the printed word as a source of information about the world; and nowadays, too, picture books and comic strips are consulted much more readily, and with much less intellectual effort, than the printed word. There can be little doubt but that pictures have come to play a very important role in communication. It strikes me as odd that, in what is nothing less than a visual age, philosophers have had so little to say about the visual image and its use in communication. Hardly anything has been done to explain the way in which pictures are used to inform us; the way in which they influence our thinking, our attitudes and our perception of the world. My aim in this work is to fill this gap, and in so doing to provide a viable account of pictorial communication.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789024719426
Publisher: Springer Netherlands
Publication date: 06/30/1977
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1977
Pages: 165
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.01(d)

Table of Contents

One Pictures and Depicting.- I Picturing.- 1. Pictures and denotation.- 2. The use of pictures.- 3. Telling what a picture is of.- 4. Conclusion.- II Depicting and the Conventional Image.- 1. Leonardo and the practice of depicting.- 2. Towards conventionalism.- 3. Coordination problems.- 4. The problem of picturehood.- 5. Conventions and resemblance.- 6. An objection to conventionalism.- 7. Conclusion.- III Conventions and the Growth of Pictorial Style.- 1. Two kinds of pictorial convention.- 2. The Gombrich problem.- 3. The individuation of pictorial styles.- 4. Pictorial progress.- 5. Pictorial revolutions.- 6. Conclusion.- Two Pictorial Representation.- IV Pictorial Illocutionary Acts.- 1. The picture/use distinction.- 2. Illocutionary acts.- 3. Pictorial illocutions.- 4. Explaining oneself.- 5. Conclusion.- V Pictorial Propositions.- 1. Indication and attribution.- 2. Can pictures express propositions?.- 3. Pictorial propositions — An objection.- 4. Pictorial propositions — Some qualifications.- 5. Conclusion.- VI The Pictorial Point of View.- 1. Pictures in nature — Schemata and beliefs.- 2. Noticing a rhinoceros.- 3. Perceptual revolutions.- 4. Visual ‘Metaphor’.- 5. Representation and arousal.- 6. Pictures and expression.- 7. Conclusion.- VII Conclusion.- Name index.
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