Does art, besides being beautiful or sublime, or directly portraying scenes, have its own sense of rightness or truth? This book states it does, and not only by means of expressing apparent moods, but by exemplifying certain features, features when seen cohesively with their time and environment have their own sense of appropriateness. However, the claim of this volume is stronger than this, namely it is not only that art is a phenomena that fits or fails to fit its context, but like science is not after any laundry-list of truths, but instead develops and investigates particular features for systematic findings, in which as trials can succeed or fail to extract phenomena of interest. These findings, when successful, are rightful; an extension of truth.
This book was compiled from multiple papers and then elaborated upon them further, with no real attempt to integrate them into anything cohesive, though they work together thematically. From that perspective, what would be of most service to the reader is a kind of road map of how the chapters loop into each other. The first four chapters were originally self-standing articles
1. Words, works, worlds: this chapter identifies some ways of worldmaking as "frame-of-reference building" using an analytical approach (admitting that analysis is one of many ways of "universe of world building"), these ways including: composition (labeling and relation making), weighting and emphasis, utilizing systems of ordering (of tones of duration into pitches and periodicity or letters into words), perceptual effects of deletion and supplimentation (pursued in 5), and deformations such as exaggeration and data fitting. It then observes the man-on-the-street, seeing the world in a homemade bricolage of perceptual/scientific/artistic/ad-hoc concepts formed from their experience.
2. The status of style: this chapter applies to the tools of the above to what style consists of, questioning common choices such as "that which is the way something is said rather than its content" or "what is expressed about the topic rather than its facts"
3. Some questions concerning quotation: an attempt to expand quotation into visual arts and music. I think this section is rather misguided, getting hung up on the "x" versus x form of quotation instead of attempting to integrate it with the kind of quotation found in jazz, that involves themes considered broadly recognizable and often signaled by changes in style, just as " and italics are changes in formatting. I think that more cohesive with the worldmaking theme there would have been a rightful quotation that subsumed logical quotation.
4. When is art? Though some particular items are likely perceived as art or not no matter how they are used, the context of presenting something as art is usually effective to making it into art (as presenting a particular rock in a natural history museum makes it a sample of that kind of rock). This chapter introduces sampling as a means to determine when a given item is rightful.
The next article could also have been self standing, but from there the multiple threads become more clearly integrated.
5. A puzzle about perception: this looks into various perceptions of motion (namely running lights) and how all perceptions of motion stem from sudden changes in color, leading to questions about what constitutes a real perception of motion, pursuing how perceptual issues affect worldmaking.
6. The fabrication of facts: an elaboration of 1.'s worldmaking as applied to art and fiction.
7. On rightness of rendering: this chapter looks to conflicts in worlds, and when one is wrong instead of both being mutually right in their respective frameworks of reference, continuing to develop worldmaking ideas of 1 and 6 using the sampling ideas of 4.
Overall, this book contains a number of fascinating ideas but could have been more rightfully rendered, allowing any given sampling to either give a more cohesive view of worldmaking or a yet more varied texture that would have exemplified the differences between worlds. This style ironically undercuts its message.