•  22
    The Idea of Form: Rethinking Kant's Aesthetics
    with S. Davies, R. Hopkins, and J. Robinson
    British Journal of Aesthetics 44 (3): 313-315. 2004.
  •  227
    The morality of musical imitation in Jean-Jacques Rousseau
    Dissertation, King's College London. 2005.
    The thesis analyses the relation between Rousseau’s musical writings and elements of his moral, social and linguistic philosophy. In particular, I am concerned to demonstrate: (i.) how the core of Rousseau’s theory of musical imitation is grounded in the same analysis of the nature of man which governs his moral and social philosophy; (ii.) how this grounding does not extend to the stylistic prescriptions the justification of which Rousseau intended his musical writings to offer. The central arg…Read more
  •  54
    Recently, cognitivist accounts about art have come under pressure to provide stronger arguments for the view that artworks can yield genuine insight and understanding. In Gregory Currie’s Imagining and Knowing: Learning from Fiction, for example, a convincing case is laid out to the effect that any knowledge gained from engaging with art must “be judged by the very standards that are used in assessing the claim of science to do the same” (Currie 2020: 8) if indeed it is to count as knowledge. Co…Read more
  •  41
    Opera and the Limits of Philosophy: on Bernard Williams's Music Criticism: Articles
    British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (4): 469-479. 2010.
    This paper provides a reading of the opera criticism of Bernard Williams in the light of his philosophical writings. Beginning with the observations that his philosophical writing lacks engagement with musical and aesthetic issues, and his operatic writing appears to present no particular philosophy of the subject, I try to draw together certain themes by mapping Williams's operatic concerns onto his philosophical project more generally. I argue that the 'excessive' nature of the artform—the ide…Read more
  •  13
    Absolute Programme Music
    British Journal of Aesthetics 57 (1): 71-75. 2017.
    Mark Evan Bonds’ recent book, Absolute Music, deepens considerably the historical context within which Eduard Hanslick’s famous treatise on musical beauty can be read. This paper argues that, with the aid of this expanded context, we can understand Hanslick’s treatise to have provided contemporary and subsequent audiences with a kind of meta-programme for listening to symphonic and other non-texted music. That is to say, Hanslick’s text arguably informed and directed the way audiences came to li…Read more
  •  22
    On the Moral Psychology and Normative Force of Aesthetic Reasons
    Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 54 (1): 20. 2020.
  •  25
    Music, Philosophy, and Modernity
    British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (4): 459-461. 2008.
  •  188
    What Do We Understand In Musical Experience?
    Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 2 (2): 70-75. 2005.
    Of the many difficult questions that populate the rather treacherous terrain of the philosophy of music, the one that perplexes and interests me the most often crops up in various guises in the myriad books of‘ Quotations for music lovers’ and such like. The following version may be said to capture its fundamental idea. Given that music doesn’t seem in any obvious sense to be about anything precisely, why do we seem to think that it conveys so much so strongly?