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  1. Kinetic Memories. An embodied form of remembering the personal past.Marina Trakas - 2021 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 42 (2):139-174.
    Despite the popularity that the embodied cognition thesis has gained in recent years, explicit memories of events personally experienced are still conceived as disembodied mental representations. It seems that we can consciously remember our personal past through sensory imagery, through concepts, propositions and language, but not through the body. In this article, I defend the idea that the body constitutes a genuine means of representing past personal experiences. For this purpose, I focus on the analysis of bodily movements associated with (...)
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  • Defining pictorial style: Lessons from linguistics and computer graphics. [REVIEW]John Willats & Fredo Durand - 2005 - Axiomathes 15 (3):319-351.
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  • (1 other version)Science versus the Humanities: Hyman on Wollheim on Depiction.Gary Kemp - 2016 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 50 (2):1-7.
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  • (1 other version)Science versus the Humanities: Hyman on Wollheim on Depiction.Gary Kemp - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 50 (2):1-7.
    In the seventh chapter of his extraordinary book The Objective Eye, John Hyman offers various criticisms of Richard Wollheim’s theory of pictorial depiction.1 My immediate purpose in this short piece is to make the case that these criticisms fail. By no means do I claim that there are not other criticisms to be made against Wollheim’s theory or that Hymans’s book as a whole fails—not in its overarching attempt to rescue the objectivity of art from subjectivist views or, more narrowly, (...)
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