According to pluralism about some concept, there are multiple non-equivalent, legitimate concepts pertaining to the (alleged) ontological category in question. It is an open question whether conceptual pluralism implies anti-realism about that category. In this article, I argue that at least for the case of music, it does not. To undermine the application of an infuential move from pluralism (about music concepts) to anti-realism (about the music category), then, I provide an argument in support of indiference realism about music, by appeal to music archaeological research, via an analogy with Adrian Currie's indiference realism about species licensed by paleobiological research
It is often taken for granted that music, whatever else it is able to do, cannot articulate ideas. T...
Realism about musical works is often tied to some type of Platonism. Nominalism, which posits that m...
This paper is about the dilemma raised against musical ontology by Roger Scruton, in his The Aest...
We argue for conceptual pluralism about music. In our view, there is no right answer to the question...
The scientific investigation of music requires contributions from a diverse array of disciplines (e...
The philosophical and scientific explication of music is a cutting-edge field in contemporary academ...
This essay holds that music is the art of tones, while rejecting the view that music is the universa...
We argue for an approach to the theory of music which starts from the position that music is primari...
The core of the history of musical thought consists of large-scale doctrines striving to explain the...
In modern pedagogical anthropology the term ‘image’ is often used to describe definitions of ‘man’ a...
What would contemporary music scholarship look like if it was no longer imprinted with the discipli...
Contemporary anthropology is characterized by a wide array of research topics, with music becoming a...
International audienceDuring the decade of the 1960's linguistics entered what can be seen as a para...
Does the music that we know have a language-like semantics? I argue that mere agreement among audito...
Background in Musicology. The fundamental texts of musicology from Grosseteste to the Prakempa to Sc...
It is often taken for granted that music, whatever else it is able to do, cannot articulate ideas. T...
Realism about musical works is often tied to some type of Platonism. Nominalism, which posits that m...
This paper is about the dilemma raised against musical ontology by Roger Scruton, in his The Aest...
We argue for conceptual pluralism about music. In our view, there is no right answer to the question...
The scientific investigation of music requires contributions from a diverse array of disciplines (e...
The philosophical and scientific explication of music is a cutting-edge field in contemporary academ...
This essay holds that music is the art of tones, while rejecting the view that music is the universa...
We argue for an approach to the theory of music which starts from the position that music is primari...
The core of the history of musical thought consists of large-scale doctrines striving to explain the...
In modern pedagogical anthropology the term ‘image’ is often used to describe definitions of ‘man’ a...
What would contemporary music scholarship look like if it was no longer imprinted with the discipli...
Contemporary anthropology is characterized by a wide array of research topics, with music becoming a...
International audienceDuring the decade of the 1960's linguistics entered what can be seen as a para...
Does the music that we know have a language-like semantics? I argue that mere agreement among audito...
Background in Musicology. The fundamental texts of musicology from Grosseteste to the Prakempa to Sc...
It is often taken for granted that music, whatever else it is able to do, cannot articulate ideas. T...
Realism about musical works is often tied to some type of Platonism. Nominalism, which posits that m...
This paper is about the dilemma raised against musical ontology by Roger Scruton, in his The Aest...