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    A spectator's experience of likeness in respect of outlin... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Hopkins's theory of depiction cannot satisfy Lopes's independence constraint

    A spectator's experience of likeness in respect of outline shape may depend on what she already sees in the picture

    AestheticsPerception
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    AestheticsPerception

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    Hopkins's theory of depiction cannot satisfy Lopes's independence constraintIf experienced resemblance is explained by depiction, it cannot itself explain d...Lopes's independence constraint requires that a spectator be able to perceive a ...

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    Therefore, on Abell's theory, a spectator must already know what the p...78%A spectator's knowledge of the artist's communicative intentions is ga...75%If the only constraint on marks representing objects is that the marks...72%Lopes's independence constraint requires that a spectator be able to p...72%

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    However, several difficulties remain. First, it is unclear how Hopkins’s theory can accommodate Lopes’s independence constraint. As we have seen (see above, §1.2), according to Lopes, if a theory implies that a spectator perceives a picture’s content by perceiving a resemblance between the marks on its surface and the kind of object which it represents, then she must be able to perceive this resemblance “without first knowing” what the picture represents. But a spectator’s “experience of liken

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