Eran Guter

Max Stern Yezreel Valley College
  •  1523
    Wittgenstein on musical depth and our knowledge of humankind
    In Garry L. Hagberg (ed.), Wittgenstein on Aesthetic Understanding, Palgrave-macmillan. pp. 217-247. 2017.
    Wittgenstein’s later remarks on music, those written after his return to Cambridge in 1929 in increasing intensity, frequency, and elaboration, occupy a unique place in the annals of the philosophy of music, which is rarely acknowledged or discussed in the scholarly literature. These remarks reflect and emulate the spirit and subject matter of Romantic thinking about music, but also respond to it critically, while at the same time they interweave into Wittgenstein’s forward thinking about the ph…Read more
  •  1069
    Ornamentality in the New Media
    In Anat Biletzki (ed.), Hues of Philosophy. Essays in Memory of Ruth Manor, College Publications. pp. 83-96. 2010.
    Ornamentality is pervasive in the new media and it is related to their essential characteristics: dispersal, hypertextuality, interactivity, digitality and virtuality. I utilize Kendall Walton's theory of ornamentality in order to construe a puzzle pertaining to the new media. the ornamental erosion of information. I argue that insofar as we use the new media as conduits of real life, the excessive density of ornamental devices which is prevalent in certain new media environments, forces us to c…Read more
  •  2762
    Georg Henrik von Wright was not only the first interpreter of Wittgenstein, who argued that Spengler’s work had reinforced and helped Wittgenstein to articulate his view of life, but also the first to consider seriously that Wittgenstein’s attitude to his times makes him unique among the great philosophers, that the philosophical problems which Wittgenstein was struggling, indeed his view of the nature of philosophy, were somehow connected with features of our culture or civilization. In this p…Read more