this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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I mean, even leaving out the philosophy, there's a very real sense that we've always been choosing how we want our pictures distorted.
When we capture light, we need to make choices about what specta of light are represented most heavily, how much light to capture, how quickly to capture it, what order we capture it in, and how we map the light onto the capture media.
We readily accept a computer making choices about all these settings to give us a picture that's more representative of how we see the scene that we're photographing.
It doesn't feel like too much of a stretch to extend that to account for the human perception being able to, effectively, apply these settings differently across the perceptive scene.
You can see details on a white person and black persons faces at the same time, which nieve film and digital systems have a weirdly hard time with because of how color works. To make that work we have to go well beyond point and shoot.
Same goes for things like image stabilization, and techniques used for capturing a moving subject and the background at the same time.
Now, I'm not saying there isn't a line where it stops being photography and starts being something else, but his statement sounds like a language barrier technical statement, rather than philosophical.