Southwind17
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,154
How many definitions (of anything) would you say are ... well ... absolutely definitive?! Just because something is "hard" to do doesn't make it impossible, does it?!If it is clearly true that porn is not art, why is it so hard to provide a definition which clearly seperates the two?
How many definitions (of anything) would you say are ... well ... absolutely definitive?! Just because something is "hard" to do doesn't make it impossible, does it?!
The laws adopt commonwealth provisions where the court looks at the artistic merit of the material when deciding whether it is child pornography, rather than relying on the defence of artistic purpose.
Mr Hatzistergos said the new laws would not apply to material that is classified.
"If (art) is classified under commonwealth legislation, then it is exempt from the reach of these particular provisions," he told reporters in Sydney on Tuesday.
I'm claiming that porn is not art per se. Are you claiming that porn (i.e. all porn) IS art per se? If so, by what absolutely unequivocal definition of "art"?It is the case, as you claim, that something is clearly one thing or the other (or neither but never both), then drawing that line should be easy. Yet no one seems to be able to do so. In a robust manner.
I'm claiming that porn is not art per se. Are you claiming that porn (i.e. all porn) IS art per se? If so, by what absolutely unequivocal definition of "art"?
So you concur, then, that porn is not art (or artistic child nudity, to use your narrower term) per se, given your suggested, almost bipolar, criteria for differentiating the two?Perhaps, and this is just me throwing this out here, something for discussion, the difference between artistic child nudity and child porn is this: the way it was photographed.
For example there's a clear difference between photographing a child:
with approval from the child
with the parents there
with the explanation of the shoot to both the child and the parents
with the child and the parents keeping the right to not have the shot done
with a release form explaining what the shoot contains
with concern to the child's physical and psychological well being
with the intent that the photographs clearly placed on display for the public to see.
and
just shooting the child without anyone knowing
without caring what the child's concerns are
without any cares to the child's physical and psychological well-being
keeping the photographs secret or within a secret circle of people
no legal papers
without any consent from parents or the child
I'm claiming that porn is not art per se. Are you claiming that porn (i.e. all porn) IS art per se? If so, by what absolutely unequivocal definition of "art"?
I claimed nothing of the sort. Porn can contain artistic elements, for sure, but it's not art per se. Perhaps if I claim that porn is not an "artform" per se that might help clarify my position.It is the case, as you claim, that something is clearly one thing or the other (or neither but never both), then drawing that line should be easy. Yet no one seems to be able to do so. In a robust manner.
So much speculation, eh, with a pre-empted conclusion clearly drawn. Somehow I don't think you are willing to be persuaded (notwithstanding that you misunderstand my claim).Personally I think the claim made in the original post is total bunk. However I am willing to be persuaded.
All Southwind17 has to do is post his definition of art, and his definition of pornography.
If we all accept those definitions, and it turns out that by those definitions it is impossible for something to be both art and pornography, Southwind17 was right all along.
If he can't post such definitions, or we disagree with those definitions, then the conclusion that porn cannot be art has not been sufficiently supported. In that scenario the claim that anyone who thinks otherwise is misguided and self-indulgent would be revealed as ad hominem well-poisoning.
I claimed nothing of the sort. Porn can contain artistic elements, for sure, but it's not art per se. Perhaps if I claim that porn is not an "artform" per se that might help clarify my position.
So you concur, then, that porn is not art (or artistic child nudity, to use your narrower term) per se, given your suggested, almost bipolar, criteria for differentiating the two?
May I suggest that a picture of a pretty woman is neither porn nor art. It's a picture.
It's the attitude of the viewer that makes it one or the other.
But being aroused by a picture of a pretty girl is a pretty predictable, normal male human reaction. (Even a reasonably common female one).
Being aroused by a picture of a ten year old is not.
Which is why I say morals must be rooted in biological reality. If we pretend otherwise, then being aroused by a photograph of anything is either "right" or "wrong" and photography itself becomes part of the problem.
The problem is that people can't make up their minds.
I claimed nothing of the sort. Porn can contain artistic elements, for sure, but it's not art per se. Perhaps if I claim that porn is not an "artform" per se that might help clarify my position.
That does not clarify your position, unfortunately.
I suggested earlier that you post your definition of art, and your definition of pornography. Since we do not yet know how you define "art" or "artform", it is no clarification at all to talk about "art per se" or something being an "artform per se".