4,703 research outputs found
“Categories of Art” at 50: An IntroductionSymposium: “Categories of Art” at 50
Introduction to a symposium in The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism on the 50th anniversary of Kendall Walton's "Categories of Art." Featuring papers by Madeleine Ransom, Stacie Friend, David Davies and Kendall Walton
Arrangement and Timing: Photography, Causation and Anti-Empiricist Aesthetics
According to the causal theory of photography (CTP), photographs acquire their depictive content from the world, whereas handmade pictures acquire their depictive content from their makers’ intentional states about the world. CTP suffers from what I call the Problem of the Missing Agent: it seemingly leaves no room for the photographer to occupy a causal role in the production of their pictures and so is inconsistent with an aesthetics of photography. In this paper, I do three things. First, I amend CTP with Fred Dretske’s distinction between triggering and structuring causes, thereby overcoming the Problem of the Missing Agent. Second, I argue that CTP so amended in fact illuminates two aesthetic interests that we may take in photographs, focussing on photographic portraiture and street photography. Third, I show how reflection on the aesthetics of photography serves to support aesthetic anti-empiricism: the view that the aesthetic value of artworks consists, at least in part, in achievement rather than sensory pleasure
California Dreaming? Cross-Cluster Embeddedness and the Systematic Non-Emergence of the 'Next Silicon Valley'
The importance of social embeddedness in economic activity is now widely accepted. Embeddedness has been shown to be particularly significant in explaining the trajectory of regional development. Nonetheless, most studies of embeddeddness and its impacts have treated each locale as an independent unit. Following recent calls for the study of cross-cluster social interactions, we look at the consistent failure of numerous localities in the United States with high potential to emulate Silicon Valley and achieve sustained success in the ICT industry. The paper contends that the answer lies in high-technology clusters being part of a larger system. Therefore, we must include in our analysis of their social structure the influence of cross-cluster embeddedness of firms and entrepreneurs. These cross-clusters dynamics lead to self-reinforcing social fragmentation in the aspiring clusters and, in time, to the creation of an industrial system in the United States based on stable dominant and subordinate (feeder) clusters. The paper expands theories of industrial clusters, focusing on social capital, networks, and embeddedness arguments, to explain a world with one predominant cluster region. It utilizes a multimethod analysis of the ICT industry centered in Atlanta, Georgia, as an empirical example to elaborate and hone these theoretical arguments.
Cosmogenic photons as a test of ultra-high energy cosmic ray composition
Although recent measurements of the shower profiles of ultra-high energy
cosmic rays suggest that they are largely initiated by heavy nuclei, such
conclusions rely on hadronic interaction models which have large uncertainties.
We investigate an alternative test of cosmic ray composition which is based on
the observation of ultra-high energy photons produced through cosmic ray
interactions with diffuse low energy photon backgrounds during intergalactic
propagation. We show that if the ultra-high energy cosmic rays are dominated by
heavy nuclei, the flux of these photons is suppressed by approximately an order
of magnitude relative to the proton-dominated case. Future observations by the
Pierre Auger Observatory may be able to use this observable to constrain the
composition of the primaries, thus providing an important cross-check of
hadronic interaction models.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Can Supersymmetry Naturally Explain the Positron Excess?
It has often been suggested that the cosmic positron excess observed by the
HEAT experiment could be the consequence of supersymmetric dark matter
annihilating in the galactic halo. Although it is well known that evenly
distributed dark matter cannot account for the observed excess, if substantial
amounts of local dark matter substructure are present, the positron flux would
be enhanced, perhaps to the observed magnitude. In this paper, we attempt to
identify the nature of the substructure required to match the HEAT data,
including the location, size and density of any local dark matter clump(s).
Additionally, we attempt to assess the probability of such substructure being
present. We find that if the current density of neutralino dark matter is the
result of thermal production, very unlikely ( or less) conditions
must be present in local substructure to account for the observed excess.Comment: Version accepted by Physical Review
Local price variation and labor supply behavior
In standard economic theory, labor supply decisions depend on the complete set of prices: the wage and the prices of relevant consumption goods. Nonetheless, most of theoretical and empirical work ignores prices other than wages when studying labor supply. The question we address in this paper is whether the common practice of ignoring local price variation in labor supply studies is as innocuous as has generally been assumed. We describe a simple model to demonstrate that the effects of wage and non-labor income on labor supply will typically differ by location. We show, in particular, the derivative of the labor supply with respect to non-labor income will be independent of price only when labor supply takes a form based on an implausible separability condition. Empirical evidence demonstrates that the effect of price on labor supply is not a simple "up-or down shift" that would be required to meet the separability condition in our key proposition.Labor supply ; Price levels
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Chapter 9 Climate anxiety, fatalism and the capacity to act
This chapter begins with the problem of ‘climate anxiety’, a psychological and cultural response to collapsing ecological systems marked by depression, trauma and helplessness. While a reasonable response to an existential threat, climate anxiety impedes our capacity to act where it leads to apathy, indecision or fatalism. The paper considers Jem Bendell’s argument that accepting and ‘grieving’ for inevitable civilisational collapse is a precondition to clear-sighted adaptation. This response is insufficient for the problem of motivation necessary for the capacity to act. It considers Martha Nussbaum’s 2018 claim that fear hinders reciprocity, amplifies infantile narcissism and endangers democracy. While salient, developing a countervailing ‘capacity for concern’ requires not merely a therapeutic relationship or the uncritical restitution of faltering liberal public institutions. Via Spinoza, an effective capacity to act against fear is conceived as interrelational and affective, founded on cooperation, friendship and the cultivation of causal knowledge. A common autonomy, one not merely of individual choice or identitarian self-expression
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