My paper seeks to maintain that in Wittgenstein there is more than the simple and obvious negation of artistic quality as the property of things, and thus a criticism of any essentialism. My reasoning will connect Wittgenstein’s evaluative idea of the aesthetic with its philosophical conception of Aspekt and the self-revealing character of the form. The themes this paper deals with are: the aesthetic judgment; the sensitivity toward rules; the aesthetic judgment as an example of the understanding of meaning. Aesthetic judgments are not to be understood as a philosophical paradigm but as a case of what, for Wittgenstein, is in general the aesthetic understanding of meaning
Wittgenstein’s distinction between saying and showing and the associated thesis, what can be shown c...
Although the concept of judgment has been replaced by the concept of belief in many philosophical su...
Wittgenstein offers three objections to the idea of aesthetics as a branch of psychology: (i) Statis...
My paper seeks to maintain that in Wittgenstein there is more than the simple and obvious negation o...
This Element argues that aesthetics, broadly conceived, plays a significant role in Wittgenstein’s p...
The question of aesthetic judgment is related to a lot of paradoxes that have marked sustainably the...
This paper takes distances from two influential images of Wittgenstein's philosophy: the image of a ...
Why is aesthetics important to Wittgenstein? What, according to him, is the function of the aestheti...
What is Wittgenstein saying when he claims that a philosophical investigation resembles an aesthetic...
Considering that dominant interpretation of Wittgenstein’s philosophy ignores what stands outside of...
Texte intégral accessible uniquement aux membres de l'Université de LorraineThe aim of this disserta...
Aesthetic non-cognitivists deny that aesthetic statements express genuinely aesthetic beliefs and in...
In this essay I argue the extent to which meaning and judgment in aesthetics figures in Wittgenstein...
In his Lectures on Aesthetics (1938) Wittgenstein notices how unimportant the role played by the adj...
Cette thèse étudie le thème esthétique dans l’œuvre de Wittgenstein. Dans le Tractatus logico-philos...
Wittgenstein’s distinction between saying and showing and the associated thesis, what can be shown c...
Although the concept of judgment has been replaced by the concept of belief in many philosophical su...
Wittgenstein offers three objections to the idea of aesthetics as a branch of psychology: (i) Statis...
My paper seeks to maintain that in Wittgenstein there is more than the simple and obvious negation o...
This Element argues that aesthetics, broadly conceived, plays a significant role in Wittgenstein’s p...
The question of aesthetic judgment is related to a lot of paradoxes that have marked sustainably the...
This paper takes distances from two influential images of Wittgenstein's philosophy: the image of a ...
Why is aesthetics important to Wittgenstein? What, according to him, is the function of the aestheti...
What is Wittgenstein saying when he claims that a philosophical investigation resembles an aesthetic...
Considering that dominant interpretation of Wittgenstein’s philosophy ignores what stands outside of...
Texte intégral accessible uniquement aux membres de l'Université de LorraineThe aim of this disserta...
Aesthetic non-cognitivists deny that aesthetic statements express genuinely aesthetic beliefs and in...
In this essay I argue the extent to which meaning and judgment in aesthetics figures in Wittgenstein...
In his Lectures on Aesthetics (1938) Wittgenstein notices how unimportant the role played by the adj...
Cette thèse étudie le thème esthétique dans l’œuvre de Wittgenstein. Dans le Tractatus logico-philos...
Wittgenstein’s distinction between saying and showing and the associated thesis, what can be shown c...
Although the concept of judgment has been replaced by the concept of belief in many philosophical su...
Wittgenstein offers three objections to the idea of aesthetics as a branch of psychology: (i) Statis...