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The Seductions of Darwin

Art, Evolution, Neuroscience

By (author) Matthew Rampley
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, United States
Published: 12th Jan 2017
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 20mm
Weight: 499g
ISBN-10: 0271077425
ISBN-13: 9780271077420
Barcode No: 9780271077420
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Synopsis
The surge of evolutionary and neurological analyses of art and its effects raises questions of how art, culture, and the biological sciences influence one another, and what we gain in applying scientific methods to the interpretation of artwork. In this insightful book, Matthew Rampley addresses these questions by exploring key areas where Darwinism, neuroscience, and art history intersect. Taking a scientific approach to understanding art has led to novel and provocative ideas about its origins, the basis of aesthetic experience, and the nature of research into art and the humanities. Rampley's inquiry examines models of artistic development, the theories and development of aesthetic response, and ideas about brain processes underlying creative work. He considers the validity of the arguments put forward by advocates of evolutionary and neuroscientific analysis, as well as its value as a way of understanding art and culture. With the goal of bridging the divide between science and culture, Rampley advocates for wider recognition of the human motivations that drive inquiry of all types, and he argues that our engagement with art can never be encapsulated in a single notion of scientific knowledge. Engaging and compelling, The Seductions of Darwin is a rewarding look at the identity and development of art history and its complicated ties to the world of scientific thought.

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"A lucid historiography of the many manifestations, in art, of Darwin's theory of evolution. Summing Up: Recommended."

-D. L. Schuld, Choice "For decades, neuroarthistory, neuroaesthetics, and other biological approaches have been assembling a version of art's history that is alien to the discipline of art history. Outlandish claims have been made about the significance of brain functioning to works of art, provoking defensive criticism about the pertinence of science to art history. Matthew Rampley advances and opens the discussion by taking up the same scientific criteria advocated by the writers he analyzes, including questions of evidence, hypothesis forming, and explanatory value. In that sense this book is not a polemic but an attempt to find ground for conversation. At its heart is a broad and widely informed concern with the sense of culture that art history might bring to bear in the coming decades."

-James Elkins, editor of The Stone Art Theory Institutes series "A thoughtful examination of the attempts to reduce aesthetics and art history to neurophysiology or evolutionary science. It provides a comprehensive survey and penetrating analysis of the efforts to impose biological models on the understanding of the arts that have proliferated in recent decades."

-Branko Mitrovic, author of Rage and Denials: Collectivist Philosophy, Politics, and Art Historiography, 1890-1947