Deleuze developed the concept of «the time - image» to describe what he felt to be
a profound change in the perception of time brought about by post-World War II cinema.
[3] However although the concept of change has come to consensus, and whether it is a post-modernist change, or a late modernist period, is undetermined, the consensus is that
a profound change in the perception of works of art has occurred and a new era has been emerging on the world stage since at least the 1960s.
Not exact matches
Adding, «[VR] connects humans to other humans
in a
profound way I've never before seen
in any other form of media, and it can
change people's
perception of each other.»
«This class of compounds produces
profound changes in human
perception and consciousness, and essentially it's been taken off the clinical research bench for 40 years — it's almost unthinkable,» he says.
We had begun to define ourselves by our possessions and by the
perceptions of others to a degree that was fundamentally new and
in a way that reflected or perhaps derived from
profound changes in the ways
in which people
in the late twentieth century had begun to see the world.»
Approaching the increasingly sophisticated virtual worlds we now confront, Claerbout highlights the
profound changes taking place
in our culture, which sees capitalism and cutting - edge technologies collude to remake visual
perception.