Contributions

  • Jacquette, Dale. - Contributor

Publication

1996 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England

Language

English

Word Count

77,250 words, Guess

Page Count

309 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing1792229
  • Goodreads339505

Classifications

  • DDC111/.85/092
  • LCCB3149.A4 S37 1996

Description

This collection brings together thirteen new essays by some of the most respected contemporary scholars of Schopenhauer's aesthetics from a wide spectrum of philosophical perspectives. The dynamics of the empirical will and Will as thing-in-itself in the interplay of Schopenhauer's metaphysics and philosophy of fine art has important implications for the freedom, salvation, and tragic suffering of the artist, the representation of Platonic Ideas in art, and the role of artistic inspiration, emotion, and aesthetic pleasure in the beautiful and sublime. These essays examine the unique theory Schopenhauer developed to explain the life and work of the artist, and the influence his aesthetic philosophy has had on subsequent artistic traditions in such diverse areas as music, painting, poetry, literature, and architecture. The authors present Schopenhauer's thought as a vital and enduring contribution to aesthetic theory, and to the idealist vision that continues to guide Romantic and neo-Romantic art.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Cambridge studies in philosophy and the arts

Other Editions

  • Schopenhauer, philosophy, and the artsCambridge University Press1996-01-01

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