In this article I focus on Cavell’s theme of finding one’s voice, as it is articulated with reference to the philosophies of language of Wittgenstein and Austin. I start by spelling out Cavell’s Wittgensteinian-Austinian view of culture as the background for his approach to aesthetics and ethics. I then set out to explore the work done by the theme in aesthetics and ethics around the notion claim. I argue that Cavell’s effort to counter the pull of non-cognitivism in aesthetics and ethics, building on the notion claim, is not only illuminating of his unique way of inheriting the history of analytic philosophy but also gives us a glimpse of where and how Continental and analytic philosophy may again cross paths in the future
“But can philosophy become literature and still know itself?” With this pointed question the America...
It may be time to question analytic philosophy’s structural ignorance of the methods of ordinary lan...
Daniel Moyal-Sharrock, 'Too Cavellian a Wittgenstein: Wittgenstein's Certainty, Cavell's Scepticism'...
In this article I focus on Cavell’s theme of finding one’s voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this article I focus on Cavell’s theme of finding one’s voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this article I focus on Cavell's theme of finding one's voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this paper, I aim to reconstruct and discuss Stanley Cavell’s interpretation and critique of anal...
In this paper, I aim to reconstruct and discuss Stanley Cavell’s interpretation and critique of anal...
With reference to the period immediately following the 1979 publication of The Claim of Reason, Stan...
In a recent "AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL EXERCISE", Stanley cavell remarks that if he had been required by the ...
Cavell’s interest in aesthetic objects can be understood to be motivated by an interest in the natur...
The article proposes a reading of various perspectives in contemporary ethics, all connected to Witt...
The article addresses the issue of value present in Stanley Cavell’s philosophy of art. It focuses o...
My paper is about Andronico’s work on the connection between Ethics and Aesthetics in Wittgenstein’s...
In this paper I want to explore some questions that arise from the work of Stanley Cavell. My purp...
“But can philosophy become literature and still know itself?” With this pointed question the America...
It may be time to question analytic philosophy’s structural ignorance of the methods of ordinary lan...
Daniel Moyal-Sharrock, 'Too Cavellian a Wittgenstein: Wittgenstein's Certainty, Cavell's Scepticism'...
In this article I focus on Cavell’s theme of finding one’s voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this article I focus on Cavell’s theme of finding one’s voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this article I focus on Cavell's theme of finding one's voice, as it is articulated with referenc...
In this paper, I aim to reconstruct and discuss Stanley Cavell’s interpretation and critique of anal...
In this paper, I aim to reconstruct and discuss Stanley Cavell’s interpretation and critique of anal...
With reference to the period immediately following the 1979 publication of The Claim of Reason, Stan...
In a recent "AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL EXERCISE", Stanley cavell remarks that if he had been required by the ...
Cavell’s interest in aesthetic objects can be understood to be motivated by an interest in the natur...
The article proposes a reading of various perspectives in contemporary ethics, all connected to Witt...
The article addresses the issue of value present in Stanley Cavell’s philosophy of art. It focuses o...
My paper is about Andronico’s work on the connection between Ethics and Aesthetics in Wittgenstein’s...
In this paper I want to explore some questions that arise from the work of Stanley Cavell. My purp...
“But can philosophy become literature and still know itself?” With this pointed question the America...
It may be time to question analytic philosophy’s structural ignorance of the methods of ordinary lan...
Daniel Moyal-Sharrock, 'Too Cavellian a Wittgenstein: Wittgenstein's Certainty, Cavell's Scepticism'...