What would the people of 1834 do with a digital camera if the don't have the rest of the accoutrements? You'd also need to bring with you more than a century of manufacturing knowledge, battery technology, electrical engineering, computer science, petroleum and plastics engineering, glass technology, lens design, etc., etc.
We wouldn't be where we are if it weren't for the adventures through traditional chemical photographic techniques.
Even today… Around this site folks seem to get burned at the stake for using digital!If you tried this 100-200 years earlier, they probably would have burned you at a stake!
Probably not. I don't know much about Mr. Talbot but he could have dismissed you as Mephistopheles to his Faust or that you were just a trickster and confidence man and he just hadn't seen through your legerdemain, yet.
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Arthur C. Clarke
Fox Talbot was trying to make a different sort of picture to the ones that existed in his time. Ultimately there are only two types of realistic picture.
The first kind is an assembly-type picture reconstructed, piece by piece, from a description of something. The description is in an abstract code, perhaps an array of voltages in a computer memory or a sequence of neuro-peptides in an artist's brain and, as always, the description is not the thing being described.
The coded description is used as a set of instructions for the guided operation of a mark-making thing. Common "mark-making things" include an artist's hand wielding a paint brush, pencil, burin, etc. A modern version could be some sort of electro-mechanical printer. A typical end result is an ordered array of colored spots or lines on a substrate. In Fox Talbot's day these assembly-type pictures included paintings, drawings, etchings, mezzotints, engravings, wood cuts, etc.
Away from assembly-type pictures there is a small universe of pictures obtained by impression-type methods. Impressions include life casts, death masks, wax impressions, papier mache moulds and even the caveman's muddy hand stencil.
Photography as first mooted is an impression-type process. A real optical image enters a light sensitive surface and causes changes that result in a pattern of marks that form a picture. This picture has a one to one congruence with the image that made it. There is no involvement of coded descriptions or mark-making machines.
I think that's why the invention of photography was so fresh in a world that had already, for centuries, been glutted with millions of assembly-type pictures. Fox Talbot succeeded in having "nature" make direct pictures of herself without the process being edited through a mind.
Is that a yes or no to my original question?
This is one of them "How many fairy elephants can dance on the head of a pin?" question for those that do not have enough to keep them busy every day.
Who do you think argued "how many angels can dance on the head of a pin"?
Theologians.
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