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    Art, as a human endeavor, has a history. — Carmelics
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    Supports→Duchamp's Fountain may be displayed in a museum not because it is a work of art, but because it has a place in the history of art as a human endeavor.

    Art, as a human endeavor, has a history.

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    Duchamp's Fountain may be displayed in a museum not because it is a work of art,...Fountain, as a well-chosen memorial to the joke of presenting an upside-down uri...Museums, as a social institution, have a duty to acknowledge and exhibit that hi...

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    Duchamp's Fountain may be displayed in a museum not because it is a wo...75%Museums, as a social institution, have a duty to acknowledge and exhib...73%Origin includes the essential inner history of works and forms across ...72%Painting's true subjects are bodies in space, not actions over time.69%

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    Beardsley never explicitly responded to this objection, but he wouldn’t be fazed. The objection assumes that if an object is displayed in a museum—a fine arts museum, not a history museum or any other sort of museum—or if an art historian or art critic discusses an object, then it must be a work of art, or at least that there’s very strong reason to think that it’s a work of art. That it’s some reason to think so Beardsley wouldn’t deny; but that it’s necessarily a strong or definitive reason he

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