Laurel and Hardy Escape the Cavern of Socrates (1930); scripted by Morris Raphael Cohen; directed by Karl Popper; produced by Hal Roach. Withdrawn from distribution after it was blasted in a Variety review by Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Plato (in Republic) has Socrates tell a story of a cave in which people are held prisoner, and kept from anything but seeing shadows of whatever is actually going-on. This is a metaphor for the epistemological problem of relating experience to reälity.
Cohen, Popper, and Wittgenstein were all very influential and fashionable philosophers, concerned with that problem, at about the time that that still was taken. (Each remains very worth reading, though I don't think that Cohen exerts much-if-any continued influence.)
I am posting these images with a non-profit and educational 'fair use' motive, regarding respective copyrights. Anyone downloading and using these images for any commercial use would be in violation of respective copyrights, and does not have my approval for such use.
My name is Thom Buchanan.
I'm an artist and photographer.
People are my favorite subjects to portray in art and photos. My wife (and studio partner) has called that my 'people skills', as I've been passionately creating portrait studies for many years.
I refer to myself as a pictorialist, a combination of image-making and journalist. Images are my life.
5 comments:
"Well... here's ANOTHER nice mess you've gotten me into!"
Laurel and Hardy Escape the Cavern of Socrates (1930); scripted by Morris Raphael Cohen; directed by Karl Popper; produced by Hal Roach. Withdrawn from distribution after it was blasted in a Variety review by Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Daniel, why was it blasted? Does that mean it hasn't been seen since then? Was't Cohen a philosopher?
There was no movie Escape the Cavern of Socrates.
Plato (in Republic) has Socrates tell a story of a cave in which people are held prisoner, and kept from anything but seeing shadows of whatever is actually going-on. This is a metaphor for the epistemological problem of relating experience to reälity.
Cohen, Popper, and Wittgenstein were all very influential and fashionable philosophers, concerned with that problem, at about the time that that still was taken. (Each remains very worth reading, though I don't think that Cohen exerts much-if-any continued influence.)
I think Stan Laurel said it best: "You can lead a horse to water, but a pencil must be lead."
Post a Comment