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  1. Nov 1, 2016 · "Anthony Thomas McKenna's Showman of the Screen: Joseph E. Levine and His Revolutions in Film Promotion is a fast, thoroughly enjoyable and informative read that paints an honest portrayal of Levine's good and bad characteristics from his youth right up until a month before his death."―Robert Crane, author of Crane: Sex, Celebrity, and My Father's Unsolved Murder "This study of Levine ...

  2. Joseph Levine (born January 17, 1952) is an American philosopher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who received his PhD from Harvard University in 1981. He works on philosophy of mind and is best known for formulating the explanatory gap argument against a materialist explanation for consciousness . [1]

  3. Levine stepped down from Avco-Embassy Company in 1974 to create his own independent production studio, Joseph E. Levine Presents. He took this route because he felt that he would have more freedom spending his own money than other people’s money, guided as much by his love of movies as the desire to make money.

  4. Oct 21, 2016 · Joseph E. Levine was one of the most recognizable figures in postwar American cinema; he pioneered saturation opening techniques, revolutionized art-film marketing, and was hugely successful as a producer. He dealt in every conceivable type of film, from art house to exploitation to blockbusters, and became the most famous film promoter in America.

  5. www.josephlevine.netJoseph Levine

    BOOKS  Purple Haze: The Puzzle of Consciousness, Oxford University Press, 2001 Quality and Content: Essays on Consciousness, Representation, and Modality, Oxford University Press, 2018

  6. Joseph Levine may refer to: Joseph E. Levine (1905–1987), American film producer; Joseph Levine (philosopher) (born 1952), American philosopher

  7. Joseph E. Levine was responsible for a number of high-grossing films of the 1960s including The Carpetbaggers, Harlow, The Oscar, The Producers, and The Graduate. Levine began his career on the fringe of a film industry then dominated by Hollywood, as an exhibitor in New England during the 1930s.