![]() It has rules, points, objectives, and an outcome. One obvious difference between art and games is that you can win a game. Everybody didn't start dancing all at once. Is not a tribal dance an artwork, yet the collaboration of a community? Yes, but it reflects the work of individual choreographers. Yet a cathedral is the work of many, and is it not art? One could think of it as countless individual works of art unified by a common purpose. For example, I tend to think of art as usually the creation of one artist. Wikipedia believes "Games are distinct from work, which is usually carried out for remuneration, and from art, which is more concerned with the expression of ideas.Key components of games are goals, rules, challenge, and interaction."īut we could play all day with definitions, and find exceptions to every one. Plato, via Aristotle, believed art should be defined as the imitation of nature. She says the most articulate definition of art she's found is the one in Wikipedia: "Art is the process of deliberately arranging elements in a way that appeals to the senses or emotions." This is an intriguing definition, although as a chess player I might argue that my game fits the definition. But of course that depends on the definition of art. ![]() Santiago concedes that chess, football, baseball and even mah jong cannot be art, however elegant their rules. Any gifted artist will tell you how much he admires the "line" of those prehistoric drawers in the dark, and with what economy and wit they evoked the animals they lived among. They were great artists at that time, geniuses with nothing to build on, and were not in the process of becoming Michelangelo or anyone else. Herzog believes, in fact, that the paintings on the wall of the Cave of Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc in Southern France should only be looked at in the context of the shadows cast on those dark walls by the fires built behind the artists, which suggests the cave paintings, their materials of charcoal and ochre and all that went into them were the fruition of a long gestation, not the beginning of something-and that the artists were enormously gifted. And cave paintings were a form of storytelling, perhaps of religion, and certainly of the creation of beauty from those chicken-scratches Werner Herzog is even now filming in 3-D. Actually, speech probably evolved into a form of storytelling and song long before writing was developed. She then says speech began as a form of warning, and writing as a form of bookkeeping, but they evolved into storytelling and song. Her point is that while video games may be closer to the chicken scratch end of the spectrum, I am foolish to assume they will not evolve. Then she shows a slide of a prehistoric cave painting, calling it "kind of chicken scratches on walls," and contrasts it with Michelangelo's ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. She begins by saying video games "already ARE art." Yet she concedes that I was correct when I wrote, "No one in or out of the field has ever been able to cite a game worthy of comparison with the great poets, filmmakers, novelists and poets." To which I could have added painters, composers, and so on, but my point is clear. It's only 15 minutes long, and she makes the time pass quickly. If you want to follow along, I urge you to watch her talk, which is embedded below. I have the luxury of responding after consideration. This suggests that, proportionally, a man needs to secure more seat space using his legs than a woman would need to in order for the man to maintain enough room to sit up straight in his seat.What stirs me to return to the subject? I was urged by a reader, Mark Johns, to consider a video of a TED talk given at USC by Kellee Santiago, a designer and producer of video games. ![]() But, even more interesting, in this data set measuring close to 4,000 people, women and men were found to have very similar distributions of hip breadths. The military data reported almost equal differentials between men and women’s upper torso breadth. The measurement captured forearm-to-forearm breadth, which may offer additional insight into the manspreading phenomenon. These measurements were taken slightly differently but yielded similar conclusions overall. In a sense, a man’s knees may function like the proverbial cat’s whiskers - used as a kind of heuristic to test if there is ample space for his torso to fit on the seat.Ī second data series reported measurements from military personnel. ![]() A bench seat on the subway is basically two planes that meet at a 90-degree angle: So, if a man sits on the subway with his knees together, and other passengers crowd in closely on both sides, then his torso likely won’t fit on the top half of the seat if his knees are positioned less than shoulder width apart. ![]()
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