-
46Borges and Danto: A reply to Michael WreenBritish Journal of Aesthetics 31 (4): 72-76. 1991.In response to Michael Wreen, 'Once is Not Enough?' (British Journal of Aesthetics 1990), this article argues that the short story by Jorge Luis Borges, 'Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote' supports Arthur Danto's account of the individuation of art works, according to which two verbally identical compositions can be two distinct works. Wreen argues that the Menard story is a case of copying. But the story is one of intentional coincidence of texts, not copying. Hence Wreen lacks a convincing …Read more
-
243Self and world in Schopenhauer's philosophyOxford University Press. 1989.Janaway provides a detailed and critical account of Schopenhauer's central philosophical achievement: his account of the self and its relation to the world of objects. The author's approach to this theme is historical, yet is designed to show the philosophical interest of such an approach. He explores in unusual depth Schopenhauer's often ambivalent relation to Kant, and highlights the influence of Schopenhauer's view of self and world on Wittgenstein and Nietzsche, as well as tracing the many p…Read more
-
84Aesthetic Autonomies: A Discussion of Paul Guyer, Kant and the Experience of FreedomKantian Review 1 151-161. 1997.There are two familiar strategic approaches to Kant's Critique of Judgement which commentators have not always found easy to combine. One would regard the work as fitting snugly into Kant's enterprise as the keystone that absorbs the forces of his theoretical and practical philosophies, uniting them and itself into a single sound structure. That Kant saw it this way is obvious from his Introduction to the Critique. But the other approach has sometimes seemed more fruitful: start with the Analyti…Read more
-
84Review of Joseph Margolis, Art and Philosophy: Conceptual Issues in Aesthetics (1981). (review)Mind 93 (370): 294-296. 1984.
-
192What’s So Good about Negation of the Will?: Schopenhauer and the Problem of the Summum BonumJournal of the History of Philosophy 54 (4): 649-669. 2016.The final part of Schopenhauer’s argument in The World as Will and Representation concerns “affirmation and negation of the will”. He argues, with a fervor that borders on the religious, that “negation of the will” is a condition of unique value, the only state that enables “true salvation, redemption from life and from suffering”. Some commentators have asserted without qualification that this condition is his “highest good.” However, Schopenhauer in fact claims that there cannot be a highest g…Read more
-
Review of MAGEE, B. "The Philosophy of Schopenhauer" (review)Mind 93 (n/a): 608. 1984.Book review.
-
112History of Philosophy: The Analytical IdealAristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 62 (1). 1988.A two-part symposium. Janaway's article offers an analysis and critique of a methodological assumption current in the history of philosophy, which he labels 'the Analytical Ideal'. It discusses the views of P.F. Strawson, Michael Ayres, and Richard Rorty among others.
-
36The Two Fundamental Problems of Ethics (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2009.Arthur Schopenhauer's The Two Fundamental Problems of Ethics consists of two groundbreaking essays: 'On the Freedom of the Will' and 'On the Basis of Morals'. The essays make original contributions to ethics and display Schopenhauer's erudition, prose-style and flair for philosophical controversy, as well as philosophical views that contrast sharply with the positions of both Kant and Nietzsche. Written accessibly, they do not presuppose the intricate metaphysics which Schopenhauer constructs el…Read more
-
33Review of: Aaron Ridley, Music, Value and the Passions (1995) (review)British Journal of Aesthetics 39 (2): 198-200. 1999.Review of: Aaron Ridley, Music, Value and the Passions (1995).
-
Schopenhauer: Subject, Object, and WillDissertation, Oxford University. 1983.DPhil thesis submitted 1983.
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland