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  1. Wittgenstein Listens to Mahler: How to Do Philosophy and Compose Music in the Breakdown of Tradition?Béla Szabados - 2007 - Dialogue 46 (1):91-113.
    ABSTRACTThis article retrieves, situates, and interprets Ludwig Wittgenstein's overlooked remarks about the composer Gustav Mahler, and connects them with Wittgenstein's philosophical perspective and practice, as well as with his musical aesthetics.
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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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  • El arte como dramatización Y experiencia estética.Porfirio Cardona Restrepo - 2010 - Escritos 18 (41):326-363.
    El artículo pretende demostrar que a partir del arte como experiencia estética y dramatización, Richard Shusterman logra superar la estética analítica que había restringido el arte al análisis de los conceptos y a la práctica institucional. Ya no se trata de conocer la verdad del arte sino de potenciarlo para que abarque otros niveles de la vida y puedan mejorarla ética y políticamente.
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  • Scetticismo ed espressione nella filosofia dell'arte.Davide Quattrocchi - unknown
    The purpose of this research is to show the relevance of the notion of 'skepticism' for the philosophy of art. From Modernism on, art is plagued by a lack of confidence in the traditional conventions and by an instability of the criteria governing the membership of an object to the category of 'art'. The notion of 'skepticism' is linked to the concept of 'expression': if art faces a form of skepticism, then the emphasis on the personal expression of artists and (...)
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