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Richard Eldridge

  •  Home
  •  Publications
    73
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University of Chicago
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1981
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Language
Aesthetics
19th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (73)
  •  41
    An Introduction to the Philosophy of Art
    Cambridge University Press. 2003.
    An Introduction to the Philosophy of Art is a clear and compact survey of philosophical theories of the nature and value of art, including in its scope literature, painting, sculpture, music, dance, architecture, movies, conceptual art and performance art. This second edition incorporates significant new research on topics including pictorial depiction, musical expression, conceptual art, Hegel, and art and society. Drawing on classical and contemporary philosophy, literary theory and art critic…Read more
    An Introduction to the Philosophy of Art is a clear and compact survey of philosophical theories of the nature and value of art, including in its scope literature, painting, sculpture, music, dance, architecture, movies, conceptual art and performance art. This second edition incorporates significant new research on topics including pictorial depiction, musical expression, conceptual art, Hegel, and art and society. Drawing on classical and contemporary philosophy, literary theory and art criticism, Richard Eldridge explores the representational, formal and expressive dimensions of art. He argues that the aesthetic and semantic density of the work, in inviting imaginative exploration, makes works of art cognitively, morally and socially important. This importance is further elaborated in discussions of artistic beauty, originality, imagination and criticism. His accessible study will be invaluable to students of philosophy of art and aesthetics.
    Aesthetics
  •  67
    Beyond Representation: Philosophy and Poetic Imagination (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 1996.
    The essays in this 1996 volume explore the ways in which traditional philosophical problems about self-knowledge, self-identity, and value have migrated into literature since the Romantic and Idealist periods. How do so-called literary works take up these problems in a new way? What conception of the subject is involved in this literary practice? How are the lines of demarcation between philosophy and literature problematised? The contributors examine these issues with reference both to Romantic…Read more
    The essays in this 1996 volume explore the ways in which traditional philosophical problems about self-knowledge, self-identity, and value have migrated into literature since the Romantic and Idealist periods. How do so-called literary works take up these problems in a new way? What conception of the subject is involved in this literary practice? How are the lines of demarcation between philosophy and literature problematised? The contributors examine these issues with reference both to Romantic and Idealist writers and to some of their literary and philosophical inheritors and revisers. Their essays offer a philosophical understanding of the roots and nature of contemporary literary and philosophical practice, and elaborate, powerful and influential, but rarely decisively articulated, conceptions of the human subject and of value.
    Aesthetic ImaginationLiterature and Knowledge
  • David Best, Feelings and Reason in the Arts (review)
    Philosophy in Review 6 329-332. 1986.
    Moral States and ProcessesBritish Philosophy
  •  1
    C.G. Prado, The Limits Of Pragmatism (review)
    Philosophy in Review 9 328-330. 1989.
  •  5
    Frank Lentricchia, After the New Criticism (review)
    Philosophy in Review 2 230-232. 1982.
    European Philosophy
  •  2
    Mark C. Taylor, Deconstruction in Context: Literature and Philosophy (review)
    Philosophy in Review 8 40-42. 1988.
  • Anthony J. CASCARDI , "Literature and the Question of Philosophy" (review)
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 43 (1): 160. 1989.
  • P. Guyer, Kant and the Claims of Taste (review)
    Société Française de Philosophie, Bulletin 70 (3): 346. 1979.
    Kant: Aesthetics
  • Cavell on American philosophy and the idea of America
    In Stanley Cavell, Cambridge University Press. pp. 172--190. 2003.
    20th Century American Philosophy
  • Althusser and Ideological Criticism of the Arts
    In Salim Kemal & Ivan Gaskell (eds.), Explanation and Value in the Arts, Cambridge University Press. pp. 165--88. 1993.
    20th Century Continental PhilosophyLouis Althusser
  •  57
    Deconstruction and its alternatives
    Man and World 18 (2): 147-170. 1985.
  •  143
    Literature, Life, and Modernity
    Cambridge University Press. 2008.
    In Literature, Life, and Modernity Richard Eldridge focuses on the question of a reader's or a viewer's response to a literary or dramatic work in a specific historical epoch ("modernity"). That is, in contrast with many other philosophical approaches to literature, he avoids fixing attention on any putative doctrinal (moral or political or diagnostic) claims in a literary work. Thereby, and in many other admirable ways, he avoids the danger of treating literature as philosophy manqué, concedes …Read more
    In Literature, Life, and Modernity Richard Eldridge focuses on the question of a reader's or a viewer's response to a literary or dramatic work in a specific historical epoch ("modernity"). That is, in contrast with many other philosophical approaches to literature, he avoids fixing attention on any putative doctrinal (moral or political or diagnostic) claims in a literary work. Thereby, and in many other admirable ways, he avoids the danger of treating literature as philosophy manqué, concedes the distinctness of literary experience, and only then asks about the significance of this experience. (In this way his approach is reminiscent to some extent of Schiller's; not bad company to be keeping.) This all amounts to a philosophy of literature of sorts,[1] but avoids a forced "philosophy in literature" or "literature as philosophy" treatment. There are themes and ideas at stake of course, but for distinct historical reasons, Eldridge also thinks of what he generally calls "modern" literature as characterized precisely by the absence of any thematic resolution, and so by a kind of play of possibilities, unsettledness, even homelessness. But, he argues, this is a play of ambiguity that
    AestheticsPhilosophy of Literature
  •  30
    Work on Oneself (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 62 (3): 666-668. 2009.
    Metaphysics and EpistemologyThe Self
  •  100
    Hypotheses, Criterial Claims, and Perspicuous Representations: Wittgenstein's 'Remarks on Frazer's The Golden Bough'
    Philosophical Investigations 10 (3): 226-245. 1987.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
  •  2
    Wittgenstein on aspect-seeing, the nature of discursive consciousness, and the experience of agency
    In William Day & Víctor J. Krebs (eds.), Seeing Wittgenstein Anew, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
    Ludwig Wittgenstein
  •  147
    The Oxford handbook of philosophy and literature (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2009.
    The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Literature contains 23 newly commissioned essays by major philosophers and literary scholars that investigate literature ...
    Philosophy of LiteratureLiterary Values
  •  40
    The persistence of romanticism: essays in philosophy and literature
    Cambridge University Press. 2001.
    These challenging essays defend Romanticism against its critics. They argue that Romantic thought, interpreted as the pursuit of freedom in concrete contexts, remains a central and exemplary form of both artistic work and philosophical understanding. Marshalling a wide range of texts from literature, philosophy and criticism, Richard Eldridge traces the central themes and stylistic features of Romantic thinking in the work of Kant, Hölderlin, Wordsworth, Hardy, Wittgenstein, Cavell and Updike. T…Read more
    These challenging essays defend Romanticism against its critics. They argue that Romantic thought, interpreted as the pursuit of freedom in concrete contexts, remains a central and exemplary form of both artistic work and philosophical understanding. Marshalling a wide range of texts from literature, philosophy and criticism, Richard Eldridge traces the central themes and stylistic features of Romantic thinking in the work of Kant, Hölderlin, Wordsworth, Hardy, Wittgenstein, Cavell and Updike. Through his analysis he shows that Romanticism is neither emptily literary and escapist nor dogmatically optimistic and sentimental. This is the first serious philosophical defense of the ethical ideals of Romanticism and will appeal particularly to all professionals and students in philosophy, literature and aesthetics who are interested in what, philosophically, literature can show that philosophy cannot say.
    Philosophy of Literature, Misc
  •  100
    Authority and estrangement: An essay on self-knowledge
    Philosophical Investigations 26 (4). 2003.
    Richard Moran, Authority and Estrangement: An Essay on Self Knowledge.
    Expression-Based Accounts of Self-Knowledge
  •  82
    Philosophy and the achievement of community: Rorty, Cavell and criticism
    Metaphilosophy 14 (2). 1983.
    Richard RortyPolitical Theory
  •  143
    Metaphysics and the interpretation of persons: Davidson on thinking and conceptual schemes (review)
    Synthese 66 (3). 1986.
    Certain metaphysical and epistemological presuppositions are shown to play a role in the defense of Davidson's claims that an empirically constructed theory of truth provides an adequate theory of meaning for any natural language. Dadivson puts forward demonstrative arguments in favor of these presuppositions in On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme, Thought and Talk, and The Method of Truth in Metaphysics. These arguments are examined and found to include controversial and dubitable assumptio…Read more
    Certain metaphysical and epistemological presuppositions are shown to play a role in the defense of Davidson's claims that an empirically constructed theory of truth provides an adequate theory of meaning for any natural language. Dadivson puts forward demonstrative arguments in favor of these presuppositions in On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme, Thought and Talk, and The Method of Truth in Metaphysics. These arguments are examined and found to include controversial and dubitable assumptions as premises. It is then suggested that both these controversial assumptions and Davidson's metaphysical and epistemological presuppositions can be partially defended, however, by dialectical, interpretive, and historical arguments that elucidate the nature of persons.
    Donald Davidson
  •  48
    Pragmatic Liberalism and the Critique of Modernity (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 23 (2): 445-447. 1999.
    Philosophy of LiteraturePhilosophy of Literature, Misc
  •  202
    The Normal and the Normative: Wittgenstein’s Legacy, Kripke, and Cavell
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 46 (4): 555-575. 1986.
    Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophy of Language, MiscellaneousRule-FollowingKripkenstein on MeaningAspects…Read more
    Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophy of Language, MiscellaneousRule-FollowingKripkenstein on MeaningAspects of Meaning, Misc
  •  80
    Literature and Moral Understanding (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 18 (1): 152-153. 1994.
    Philosophy of Literature
  •  105
    Romance and politics/romance and folly: Thomas E. Wartenberg's unlikely couples
    Journal of Social Philosophy 33 (2). 2002.
    Feminist Philosophy
  •  77
    Frege's Realist Theory of Knowledge: The Construction of an Ideal Language and the Transformation of the Subject
    Review of Metaphysics 35 (3). 1982.
    BY THE middle of the nineteenth century, serious difficulties in carrying out the Cartesian project of explaining through attention to our ideas how we may know things as they really are had become evident. A satisfactory account of the connection between occurrences of ideas in us and the properties of things apart from our ideas of them, an account promised by Descartes in the Meditations, had not been forthcoming. Descartes' claim that God's omnipotence guarantees that the members of some rec…Read more
    BY THE middle of the nineteenth century, serious difficulties in carrying out the Cartesian project of explaining through attention to our ideas how we may know things as they really are had become evident. A satisfactory account of the connection between occurrences of ideas in us and the properties of things apart from our ideas of them, an account promised by Descartes in the Meditations, had not been forthcoming. Descartes' claim that God's omnipotence guarantees that the members of some recognizable class of our ideas, the class of clear and distinct perceptions, represent things as they really are became clearly unsatisfactory as part of a realist theory of knowledge as soon as Hume and Kant had shown the unsoundness of Descartes' proofs of the existence of God. Whether or not God's omnipotence guarantees that we can know things as they are, it had become evident that we lack adequate grounds for claiming to know that this is the case. Consequently, there developed by the middle of the nineteenth century a consensus that we lacked a satisfactory account of how our ideas enable us to know things.
    Knowledge of LanguageFrege: Conception of LogicFrege: Miscellaneous
  •  51
    Some Remarks on Logical Truth: Human Nature and Romanticism
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 19 (1): 220-242. 1994.
  •  61
    The Cultural Spaces of the Arts and the Infelicities of Reductionism by margolis, joseph
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (2): 240-242. 2011.
    AestheticsHistory of Aesthetics
  •  68
    On Moral Personhood: Philosophy, Literature, Criticism, and Self-Knowledge by Richard Eldridge
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 49 (2): 169-170. 1991.
    AestheticsPhilosophy of Literature
  •  48
    Pursuits of Happiness: The Hollywood Comedy of Remarriage (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 7 (1): 140-142. 1983.
    Philosophy of Literature
  •  157
    Response to Victor yelverton Haines
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (2): 188-189. 1995.
    Aesthetics
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