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  1.  15
    The body as a data set.Daniel Rubinstein - 2019 - Philosophy of Photography 10 (2):225-227.
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  2.  5
    The promise of photography: Scale, measure and proportion in a conflicted visual milieu.Andrew Fisher, Anke Hennig, Bernd Behr, Daniel Rubinstein, Martin Charvát, Peter Szendy & Tomáš Dvořák - 2021 - Philosophy of Photography 12 (1):27-69.
    This roundtable discussion is based on an online symposium – The Promise of Photography: Scale, Measure and Proportion in a Conflicted Visual Milieu – which took place on 17 September 2021. Since its inception, photography has promised to set things to scale, to grant them measure and proportion, a series of promises that have also entailed moments of irrationality or conflict that persist in and continue to shape the era of global networked digital imaging technologies. The symposium started out from (...)
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  3.  9
    How Photography Changed Philosophy.Daniel Rubinstein - 2022 - Routledge History of Photography.
    The shadow of representation -- Time -- The event -- Simulacrum -- Latent image.
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  4.  7
    The assassination of experience by photography.Daniel Rubinstein - 2020 - Philosophy of Photography 11 (1):113-120.
    This article suggests that when the engagement with photography is limited to questions of recognition and resemblance, such approach stifles our experience of the world and directs us towards monotonous homogeneity in which everything can be represented in a photograph, and a photograph is always a representation of something or other. And yet, a photograph has the potential to move our gaze beyond representation of events and situations in a way that allows us to penetrate the appearance of things and (...)
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  5.  15
    Tag, Tagging.Daniel Rubinstein - 2010 - Philosophy of Photography 1 (2):197-200.
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  6.  11
    What is twenty-first-century photography?Daniel Rubinstein - 2016 - Philosophy of Photography 7 (1):155-160.
    In the twentieth-century photography was the de-facto face of representation, as the visual arm of an industrial society that thought to reproduce the world as commodity for the consumption by individuals. However, in the twenty-first century this logic of mechanical reproduction is augmented by the (fuzzy) logic of algorithmic processing, which does not require individuals and commodities for its operation, but converts both to packets of data. The task of photography today is not to represent the world as an image, (...)
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