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  1. La armonía de lo invisible: la música como movimiento puro en Schelling.Gustavo Cataldo Sanguinetti - 2015 - Endoxa 36:181-194.
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  • Staging the Absolute: The Total Work of Art from Wagner to Mallarmé.David Roberts - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 86 (1):90-106.
    Heidegger places Wagner’s will to the total work of art at the centre of the long 19th century. Nietzsche’s and Mallarmé’s responses to Wagner reflect all the ambiguities of modernism’s myth of absolute creation: the dreams of a new mythology and a new community are shadowed by the knowledge that the gods are nothing more than our fictions. Nietzsche and Mallarmé continue and critically interrogate the two distinct lineages of the total work of art deriving from German romanticism and the (...)
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  • Art as a product of nature as a work of art.Paul Feyerabend - 1994 - World Futures 40 (1):87-100.
    Two claims are discussed. One is that works of art are a product of nature, no less than rocks and flowers. The other is that nature itself is an artifact, constructed by scientists and artisans, throughout centuries, from a partly yielding, partly resisting material of unknown properties. Since both claims are supported by convincing evidence, the world appears much more slippery than commonly assumed by rationalists. Intellectual generalizations around ?art,? ?nature? or ?science? are simplifying devices that can help us order (...)
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  • La armonía de lo invisible: La música como movimiento puro en Schelling.Gustavo Víctor Cataldo Sanguinetti - 2015 - Endoxa 36:181.
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  • Wittgenstein e Hanslick. Per una valutazione del formalismo musicale.Alessandra Brusadin - unknown
    The present work aims at providing an evaluation of musical formalism, as it was intended by Eduard Hanslick in his treatise On the Musically Beautiful, in the light of Ludwig Wittgenstein's remarks on aesthetics and music. After a short historical introduction concerning the origins of the concept of absolute music within the framework of Romantic aesthetics and the writings of authors such as Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder, E. T. A. Hoffmann and Arthur Schopenhauer, I suggest a definition of formalism on the (...)
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