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  1. What Is Tonality?David Pitt - 1995 - International Journal of Musicology 4:291-300.
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  • The Gender Politics of Music and the Ineffable: On the Feminine in Jankelevitch and Levinas.Robin James - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 5 (2):99-118.
    ABSTRACTTranslated into English in 2004, Vladimir Jankelevitch’s book Music and the Ineffable has made a significant impact in anglophone musicology. I argue that the figure of the feminine is central to his understanding of music and musical ineffability, and use feminist philosophers’ interpretations and critiques of the figure of the feminine in his close friend and colleague Emmanuel Levinas’s work to unpack the gender politics of Jankelevitch’s book and the secondary literature on it. I focus on the figure of the (...)
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  • The Artist in a Positivist Academy.Ibanga B. Ikpe - 2018 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 65 (154).
    One of the consequences of hyper-positivism on contemporary scholarship has been an increase in measuring academic excellence by instrumental rather than intrinsic value. Increasingly, university disciplines are required to demonstrate their relevance in the marketplace, resulting in a tendency by some arts and humanities scholars to deemphasise research and concentrate on creative practice. This paper attempts to bridge the gap between these two responses. It argues that concentrating on creative practice (techne) reduces the art academic to a trades-person and that (...)
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  • Dançarino Nietzscheano imitador obediente.Eraci Gonçalves de Oliveira - 2013 - Encontro Nacional Anpof: Arte, Ciências Humanas, Educação E Religião.
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  • Music and Melancholy.Michael P. Steinberg - 2014 - Critical Inquiry 40 (2):288-310.
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  • (1 other version)Raisonner la musique.Roch Duval - 2005 - Horizons Philosophiques 16 (1).
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  • From beauty to aesthetic validity.Albert Hofstadter - 1968 - Man and World 1 (2):165-190.
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  • Innovation and change in the production of knowledge.Harvey Goldman - 1995 - Social Epistemology 9 (3):211 – 232.
    (1995). Innovation and change in the production of knowledge. Social Epistemology: Vol. 9, Knowledge (EX) Change, pp. 211-232. doi: 10.1080/02691729508578789.
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  • Is twelve-tone music artistically defective?Diana Raffman - 2003 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 27 (1):69–87.
    Worries about the artistic integrity (for lack of a better term) of twelve-tone music are not new. Critics, philosophers, musicians, even composers them- selves have assailed the idiom with a fervor usually reserved for individual artists or works. Just why it is supposed to be defective is not entirely clear, however. I want to revisit these questions by way of putting some insights from music history and theory together with some insights from the philosophy and psychology of music. To find (...)
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  • A Differential Play of Forces. Transcendental Empiricism and Music.Torbjørn Eftestøl - 2023 - Dissertation, Norwegian Academy of Music
    'A Differential Play of Forces' is a study of transcendental empiricism in musical contexts. It presents a reading of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s philosophical apparatus and explores how music can be thought of as functioning in the operation Deleuze terms transcendental empiricism. Central to transcendental empiricism is the idea of an encounter with intensive difference and the consequent experience of intensive and virtual forces. The thesis sets out to explore this idea in three interwoven steps. First, it develops transcendental (...)
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  • La mala consciència de l'èxit. Apunts sobre la Viena moderna i l'estètica de Theodor W. Adorno.Sandra Santana - 2007 - Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 38:301-316.
    https://revistes.uab.cat/enrahonar/article/view/v38-santana.
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  • The Cybernetic Approach to Aesthetics.G. H. R. Parkinson - 1961 - Philosophy 36 (136):49 - 61.
    The idea that cybernetics can throw light on problems connected with thinking and learning is now a familiar one. Psychologists who are concerned with these problems often make use of cybernetic analogies, and some cyberneticians claim that their science provides an answer to philosophical problems about the nature of thought. On this last topic a great deal has been written recently; but it is comparatively seldom that it is suggested that cybernetics can be applied to problems of aesthetics. On the (...)
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  • La música de Brahms en el pensamiento de Ludwing Wittgenstein.Vicente Ordóñez Roig - 2014 - Pensamiento y Cultura 17 (1):73-94.
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  • De l’utilité de la philosophie chez le compositeur.Danick Trottier - 2005 - Horizons Philosophiques 16 (1):53-73.
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  • Temporal and spatial accounts of sound perception. An overview of the main historical sources and theoretical problems.Nicola Di Stefano - 2023 - Gestalt Theory 45 (3):183-197.
    Summary Music has been primarily conceived as a temporal art. However, over the last two centuries or so, researchers across different disciplines including musicology, psychology, and philosophy, have been intrigued by the spatial nature of music and sounds, using spatial concepts to define music. This paper aims to demonstrate that an understanding of music perception from a temporal perspective inherently implies a certain spatial dimension. To do this, first, I briefly examine some key arguments that lead to conceiving sound perception (...)
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