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Epstein, Jean:

L'intelligence d'une machine (Les Classiques du Cinéma).

Kirkegaards Antikvariat
kir57016
Paris: Editions Jacques Melot 1946. 8vo. broché. 165 Couverture en état d'usage( 'scotchée).

Presumably the first edition. Rather worn to covers and enforced with scotch (see photo). Uncut and inside clean. Overall acceptable and suited for rebinding. L’intelligence d’une machine was published in January 1946, after more than a tenyear hiatus due to the war, when Epstein had to go in hiding. While the topic reflected in the title of the book had been a constant preoccupation throughout Epstein's previous writings, this text pursues in depth topics that will remain central to all his later publications. He here approaches cinema as a philosophy of time and space more consistently than before, and methodically construes arguments in the field of physics, mechanics, and thermodynamics. Quote from The Philosophy of the Cinematograph: "Cinema is one of these intellectual robots, still partial, that fleshes out representations – that is to say, a thought – through photo-electrical mechanics and a photo-chemical inscription. One can here recognize the primordial frameworks of reason, the three Kantian categories of space, duration, and causality. This result would already be remarkable if cinematographic thought only did what the calculating machine does, to constitute itself in the servile imitation of human ideation. But we know that the cinematograph, on the contrary, marks its representation of the universe with its own qualities, with an originality that makes this representation not a reflection or a simple copy with conceptions, of an organic mentality-mother, but rather a system that is individualized differently, partly independently, which contains the incitements for a philosophy so far from common opinions, the doxa, that one should perhaps call it an anti-philosophy." (transl. by Trond Lundemo).
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