What he's saying is that it can't be considered an expression of artistic vision because the experience is determined by the player and not the artist.Revnak said:1 and 2. That is pretty fucking arbitrary right there. You may as well say cars can't be art because you drive them, or plays because there is more than one artist. All pretty fucking arbitrary.
3. Ah, because every story is the same every reading for every individual. And if that isn't so then the work isn't art. So Melville is not a true artist since many of his works read entirely differently the second time around thanks to the many layers of irony. And consequentially Moby Dick is not art. All those thousands of literary essays written over the years wasted. Thank you OP for freeing Engish majors around the globe from ever having to write about that book again.
There are certain aspects of any game that can be considered artistic, like character design and such, but that doesn't render the entire experience art; in the same way, you could have a hand-crafted chess board, but the actual game "chess" is not art. Soccer is not art either. Beer pong is not art. Anything that satisfies the human need for play is not art. It's still worthwhile of course, but the category is different.
This is a silly statement. The value of art is definitely subjective, but the definition is not - or, at least, it isn't to nearly the same degree. It's perfectly reasonable to set a definition for what constitutes "art." Otherwise you have a society where dipping tennis balls in mayonnaise or sitting naked in a meat-lined fake ovary carries the same designation as the Mona Lisa.drummond13 said:This isn't really a debatable subject. You may as well talk about your favorite color and all of your logical reasons as to why it is superior.