Displaying: 61-80 of 335 documents

0.2 sec

61. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
William Pamerleau Film as a Non-Philosophical Resource for Philosophy Instruction
abstract | view |  rights & permissions
In this essay I argue that (by and large) film does not do philosophy, but that it nevertheless provides insights that are important to both professional philosophers and their students. Since those insights are at least partially due to the filmic qualities of the medium, using films can significantly contribute to our philosophizing, both in the classroom and in research. In fact, it is precisely because films differ from philosophic treatises that they can help us to explore some issues more effectively than simply byusing traditional texts.
62. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Jessica Gosnell Now Showing: Pedagogy and Philosophy at the Movies
63. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Mark Huston The Conversation, Film, and Philosophy
64. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Sondra Bacharach Resuscitating the Subversive in Unlikely Couples
65. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Noël Carroll Monsters and the Moving Image: Replies to Laetz and Yanal
66. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Aaron Smuts Wings of Desire: Reflections on the Tedium of Immortality
67. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 13
Dan Shaw Teaching Philosophy Through Film: Signs and the Problem of Evil
68. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Sander Lee Woody Allen Gets Away With Murder (Or Does He)?
69. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
William Pamerleau Philosophizing About Woody Allen: Do Author Intentions Matter?
70. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Dan Shaw Editor's Introduction
71. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Tadd Ruetenik "How Am I Not Myself?": Philosophical Despair In I [Heart] Huckabees
72. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Sander Lee Response to Bill Pamerleau
73. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Bart Engelen Open Your Eyes?: Why Nozick's Experience Machine Does Not Refute Hedonism
74. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Steven G. Smith Hume, Kant, And Road Runner On Causation
75. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Joseph Kupfer Orcid-ID Sea Changes: Failure to Care in The Squid and the Whale
76. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Amy Coplan Comments on Thomas E. Wartenberg's Thinking on Screen: Film as Philosophy
77. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Bruce Russell Limits to Thinking on Screen
78. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Murray Skees A Synecdoche: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Fredric Jameson's Theory of Postmodernism
79. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
George M. Wilson Some Comments On Thinking On Screen: Film As Philosophy
80. Film and Philosophy: Volume > 14
Thomas E. Wartenberg Orcid-ID Response to My Critics