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1Kulturevolution, Biologie und Sprache: Empirische und rationale SelektionskriterienDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 38 (10): 984-992. 2014.
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5Is Love Intertwined with Hatred?In Zoltán Balázs & Francis Dunlop (eds.), Exploring the World of Human Practice: Readings in and about the Philosophy of Aurel Kolnai, Central European University Press. pp. 299-312. 2004.
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39Ein Bett gestaltenDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 68 (3): 439-450. 2020.In the process of making bedsteads, Plato claimed, makers look towards the ‘idea’ of the bed. But what is that idea? Two candidates come to mind: shape and purpose. The fact that we identify objects of very different shape, not even involving a bedstead, as beds seems to render purpose conceptually superior. But, then, what is a bed’s purpose? An obvious response appears tobe: lying down and sleeping. Yet, first, beds are not needed for that. Secondly, precisely when a bed is slept on, it is not…Read more
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91Handlungstypen und Kriterien. Zu Habermas' "Theorie des kommunikativen Handelns"Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 44 (2): 220-252. 1990.In his 'Theory of Communicative Action', Jürgen Habermas wishes to distinguish between three types of action: instrumental achtion, strategic action, communicative action. The distinction is meant to be drawn along three criteria: different 'ontological presuppositions', different types of motives for action, different attitudes of actors. Criteria and do not work, and there are difficulties about criterion.
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Einführung zu den Schriften [Richard Wagners]In Laurenz Lütteken (ed.), Wagner Handbuch, Bärenreiter. pp. 110-117. 2012.In his writings, Richard Wagner imagines art as something natural. This paradox was only befitting for Wagner’s contradictory historical stance: that of an eminently modern artist loathing the modern world. For him, nature served as a yardstick apt to find the modern world deficient on all counts. But how can something ahistorical, nature, be used to judge a historical phenomenon, modernity? To arrive at the verdict Wagner was keen on, he had to fill his concept of nature with historical content…Read more
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Systemrationalität?In Karl-Otto Apel & Matthias Kettner (eds.), Die eine Vernunft und die vielen Rationalitäten, Suhrkamp. pp. 349-372. 1996.We judge actions to be rational if means are adequate to ends. In modern societies, innumerable actions are interconnected into complex systems. Does rationality, then, become a feature of systems? If so, it will not do to view means in the light of ends, Niklas Luhmann maintained. In ‘The Concept of Purpose and Systems Rationality’ (‘Zweckbegriff und Systemrationalität’) (1968), he defined the rationality of systems as their capacity to reduce complexity (“Reduktion von Komplexität”); in his la…Read more
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Arbeit am Kanon: Zu Hugo Wolfs MusikkritikenMusicologica Austriaca 26 43-52. 2007.Cultivation of the musical canon and canonisation of truly original work can be identified as guiding principles of both Hugo Wolf’s artistic and his critical practice. The latter is shaped by classicist tropes; they may serve strategic functions as well, yet cannot be reduced to them. While he rejects the merely old-fashioned, Wolf also leads a striking attack on what he terms “modern music”. His endorsed aesthetics intertwine the old and the new.
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107Über die Intentionalität von EmotionenInternational Studies in Philosophy 29 (4): 11-21. 1997.Intentionality is a key feature of emotions; we understand them as directed towards objects. Intentional objects need not be real objects. Furthermore, objects of emotions can be distinguished from their causes. At the same time, objects and causes may be related, and, for some emotions, have to be related if the emotions are to count as warranted. Psychoanalysis and comparable cures tend to ignore these relationships. That does not necessarily preclude therapeutic success. Yet being based on sa…Read more
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3698Die Idee der VerwandlungIn Verwandlungsmusik. Über komponierte Transfigurationen, Universal Edition. pp. 11-51. 2007.Within the European history of ideas, at least three conceptions of metamorphosis can be distinguished. First, as celebrated in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, there is the vision of an open-ended flux of shapes in all directions, potentially with the ambiguous result of wavering identity. Secondly, at the centre of the synoptic gospels Jesus’s transfiguration is presented as a luminous elevation, rendering his true nature unambiguous. Thirdly, alchemy conceives of metamorphosis as contingent upon a meeti…Read more
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Zur Kritik des totalisierenden Erklärungsprogramms. Über normative Voraussetzungen der Wissenschaft, am Beispiel der SoziobiologieTheologie Und Philosophie 63 (3): 384-395. 1988.
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1Moral als Problem. Friedrich Nietzsche: Fröhliche Wissenschaft § 345Zeitschrift Für Didaktik der Philosophie Und Ethik 30 (1): 56-61. 2008.
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3Darwinism as a Prohibition of Criticism. A commentary on Friedrich August von Hayek’s Theory of Moral EvolutionInternational Journal of Moral and Social Studies 5 (1): 55-66. 1990.
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22The Idea of Order: Enlightened RevisionsArchiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 98 (2): 185-196. 2012.Order has been ascribed both to nature and to society. There is a long tradition of claiming that the social order and the natural order are closely linked. Radical enlightenment challenged that tradition. According to Spinoza (Ethica, pars 1, appendix) to call something orderly simply means that we can easily imagine and remember it; ascribing order thus betrays merely something about us, not about things. This challenging idea never became Enlightenment mainstream. In fact, ties between an obj…Read more
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1435Individualism for the Masses: Aesthetic Paradox in Mahler’s Symphonic ThoughtIn Elisabeth Kappel (ed.), The Total Work of Art: Mahler’s Eighth Symphony in Context, Universal Edition. pp. 46-60. 2011.In his Eighth Symphony Gustav Mahler envisions modern artistic production to steer clear of an alternative emerging at the time: that between popular music on the one hand and esoteric avantgarde music on the other; Mahler’s music is meant to reach the masses, but without descending to audiences’ lowest common denominator. One query through which Mahler’s paradoxical aesthetic vision of an ‘individualism for the masses’ can be explored has been hinted at by the composer himself: Does his integra…Read more
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32Vollkommenes hält sich fern. Ästhetische NäherungenUniversal Edition. 2012.In ‘Vollkommenes hält sich fern’ (‘Perfection keeps itself aloof’) – the book title is drawn from a verse of American poet Kimberly Johnson (*1971) –, Philip Alperson and Andreas Dorschel discuss issues in the philosophy of music and general aesthetics related to the body, to practices and genres, values and education.
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Friedrich von Hausegger, Die Musik als Ausdruck (edited book)Universal Edition. 2010.In 1885, the Austrian music critic and scholar Friedrich von Hausegger published his book “Die Musik als Ausdruck” (“Music as Expression”) which may be understood as an answer to Eduard Hanslick’s “Vom Musikalisch-Schönen” (“On the Musically Beautiful”, 1854). Unlike Hanslick, Hausegger takes the body as central to any adequate account of music. Hence Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, in particular his book “The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals” (1872), becomes a central reference f…Read more
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1320The Idea of Order: Enlightened RevisionsArchiv für Rechts-Und Sozialphilosophie 98 (2): 185-196. 2012.Order has been ascribed both to nature and to society. There is a long tradition of claiming that the social order and the natural order are closely linked. Radical enlightenment challenged that tradition. According to Spinoza to call something orderly simply means that we can easily imagine and remember it; ascribing order thus betrays merely something about us, not about things. This challenging idea never became Enlightenment mainstream. In fact, ties between an objective natural order and ou…Read more
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747Hat die Soziobiologie eine Bedeutung für die Ethik?Filosofia 19 130-145. 1989.It is known that sociobiology, the theory of the biological origins of the social behavior of living beings, is related to ethics. However, sociobiology does not include moral doctrines but simply describes facts. The present essay discusses two basic theses, “altruism” and “reciprocal altruism”, in order to prove that a natural science free of judgments and evaluations is contrary to a theory of ethics, such as the theory of Kant and Apel, as well as to intuitive theories of ethics. Ethics is t…Read more
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575Einwände gegen das Vergleichen. Ein Versuch, sie zu beantwortenPhilosophisches Jahrbuch 113 (1): 175-183. 2006.
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821Rettende InterpretationIn Otto Kolleritsch (ed.), Musikalische Produktion und Interpretation. Zur historischen Unaufhebbarkeit einer ästhetischen Konstellation, Universal Edition. pp. 199-211. 2003.Aestheticians in the tradition of Critical Theory have claimed that the or a purpose of musical interpretation is somehow to save or salvage or rescue ("retten") the musical work. What sense, if any, can be made of this claim? The notion of salvage or rescue presupposes the concept of danger. Threats to works of art emerge from two sources: from outside and from inside. Whilst the former problem is only touched upon, the latter is discussed in some detail, using the example of Brahms' Alto Rhaps…Read more
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Die Idee des KonservatoriumsIn Laurenz Lütteken (ed.), Mendelssohns Welten, Bärenreiter. pp. 89-108. 2010.
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Der Mensch als Tier. Anmerkungen zum Programm der ‘human sociobiology’Prima Philosophia 3 (2). 1990.
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1Musik und SchmerzMusiktheorie 23 (3): 257-263. 2008.Ancient mythology related music to pain in a twofold way. Pain is the punishment inflicted for producing inferior music: the fate of Marsyas; music is sublimation of pain: the achievement of Orpheus and of Philomela. Both aspects have played defining roles in Western musical culture. Pain’s natural expression is the scream. To be present in music at all, pain needs to be transformed. So even where music expresses pain, at the same time it appeases that very pain. Unlike the scream, musical disso…Read more
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49The Crypto-Metaphysic of 'Ultimate Causes': Remarks on an Alleged ExposéRatio 1 (2): 97-112. 1988.
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755Der allgemeine Wille. Zu Rousseaus Contrat social (1762)Zeitschrift Für Didaktik der Philosophie Und Ethik 32 (1): 31-33. 2010.In his 'Contrat social', § 2.1, Jean-Jacques Rousseau argues that the general will alone can steer the forces of the state towards the end for which it was instituted, i.e., the common good. The argument's logical structure is more intricate than it seems at first glance. And the intricacy appears to be deliberate. Rousseau's authorial strategy is designed to evoke the reader's voice in articulating the fundamentals of politics.
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| European Philosophy |