I have my understanding of what art is, I attended Art college for 5 years, degree etc... you cannot impose your idea of art on anyone else. This is regardless of the exact definitions of words, of course silver cannot be gold, but this doesn't mean that some forms of art should be separated simply because of what action was taken in its creation. It is not an exact and definite process.
Duchamp presented the idea back in 1917 with 'the fountain', art is not necessarily a physical action but more 'intellectual interpretation'.
This idea still persists in allot of modern art, I don't see why photography is any different or exempt from this idea.
And the more manipulation a digital file suffers, the less it is a photograph and the more it becomes 'art'.
Well yes, this is kind of my point. Technology can take away a need for any manual craft (which is another argument itself), but what is truthful about it, is that the action of using brushes (albeit digital) and creating changes in colour and focus points contribute to the act of making a photograph art.
It matters not in the least whether you agree or not. You have no authority to change the meanings of words, any more than the silver miner does. Photographs are not works of art and cannot be works of art. It's impossible, because 'art' means 'made by hand'
See, this is where you fail.
As I said before the 'old fashioned' way of thinking is that the photo comes out of a mechanical device and then printed, therefore not art. But this
does not happen anymore!
I for one, like to spend a good while with an image I have taken and add to it,
by hand.
You said yourself that digital photo manipulation creates art. Therefore, unless you contradict yourself, my action of creating an image
is art.
We can all start another huge debate about whether digital art is art, but that's another thread. I will say though that I know a few digital artists that create characters for comic illustrations and games, and IMO they are very much artists.
Therefore, what is and isn't art is not set in stone, which is my original point.