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  1. Deeper Than Reason: Emotion and its Role in Literature, Music, and Art.Jenefer Robinson - 2005 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    Jenefer Robinson takes the insights of modern scientific research on the emotions and uses them to illuminate questions about our emotional involvement with the arts. Laying out a theory of emotion supported by the best evidence from current empirical work, she examines some of the ways in which the emotions function in the arts. Written in a clear and engaging style, her book will make fascinating reading for anyone interested in the emotions and how they work, as well as anyone (...)
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  • Music alone: philosophical reflections on the purely musical experience.Peter Kivy - 1990 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    In the Essai sur Vorigine des langues (), Jean-Jacques Rousseau reports on an eighteenth-century curiosity that has, from time to time, fascinated musicians ...
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  • (2 other versions)Deeper than Reason: Emotion and Its Role in Literature, Music, and Art.Jenefer Robinson - 2006 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64 (2):283-285.
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  • The Corded Shell: Reflections on Musical Expression.Peter Kivy - 1980 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 17 (1):47-55.
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  • Profundity in instrumental music.Stephen Davies - 2002 - British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (4):343-356.
    According to Peter Kivy, to be profound, music would have to be about a profound subject that is treated in an exemplary way. Instrumental music does not satisfy this definition; usually it is not about anything humanly important, and when it is, it can convey no more than banalities. Like others, I argue against the propositional character of Kivy's ‘aboutness’ criterion; profundity can be revealed or displayed other than via statements and descriptions. I am less inclined than some of Kivy's (...)
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  • Wittgenstein, Music and the Philosophy of Culture.Garry L. Hagberg - 2014 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 21:23-40.
    Wittgenstein’s scattered remarks on music, when brought together and then related to his similarly scattered remarks on culture, show a deep and abiding concern with music as a repository and conveyer of meaning in human life. Yet the conception of meaning at work in these remarks is not of a kind that is amenable to brief or concise articulation. This paper explores that conception, considering in turn the relational networks within which musical meaning emerges, what he calls a discernible “kinship” (...)
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