International audienceThis collection of essays by an international team of authors aims at investigating the interrelation of noise and sound in philosophical theory, in music and in literature. While the state of science in the Enlightenment made it difficult to describe noises or sounds in a mathematically accurate fashion, that is to say, to gain much knowledge of acoustics, the senses, which enabled perception, were objects of philosophical inquiry. Francis Bacon’s inductive method for the new science found philosophical expression in John Locke’s empiricist epistemology such as expounded in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690). In this work, Locke took most of his examples from visual perceptions. Similarly, in the field of ...
Sound Minds: Women’s Novels, Vibrational Experience, and the Listening Imagination in Nineteenth-Cen...
The oxford handbook of sound studies offers new and engaging perspectives on the significance of sou...
This essay began with a suspicion and a discomfort. The suspicion was that the pervasive theoretical...
International audienceThis collection of essays by an international team of authors aims at investig...
none1noMusic as a Science of Man offers a philosophical and historical perspective on the intellectu...
The seventeenth century witnessed major advances in physics and experimental science. This paper arg...
What does it mean to hear scientifically? What does it mean to see musically? This volume uncovers a...
enjamin Martin, the English natural philosopher, and Claude-Nicolas Le Cat, the French surgeon, both...
In 1878, at the height of his fame, Helmholtz asked what was objective in perception, declaring that...
This dissertation examines affect, rhetoric and aesthetics in relation to English thought of the sev...
We discuss John Locke's ideas in his essay of 1690 on sound and its cognition and relation to bodily...
How can someone have the right perception of sound and its nature? We hear sounds everywhere: we hea...
As Hogarth’s famous print, The Enraged Musician, makes clear, “sound” and “noise” are antithetical n...
The Government of the Senses is a study of how the changes in aesthetic culture that occurred in the...
In this fascinating collection of essays, an international group of scholars explores the sonic cons...
Sound Minds: Women’s Novels, Vibrational Experience, and the Listening Imagination in Nineteenth-Cen...
The oxford handbook of sound studies offers new and engaging perspectives on the significance of sou...
This essay began with a suspicion and a discomfort. The suspicion was that the pervasive theoretical...
International audienceThis collection of essays by an international team of authors aims at investig...
none1noMusic as a Science of Man offers a philosophical and historical perspective on the intellectu...
The seventeenth century witnessed major advances in physics and experimental science. This paper arg...
What does it mean to hear scientifically? What does it mean to see musically? This volume uncovers a...
enjamin Martin, the English natural philosopher, and Claude-Nicolas Le Cat, the French surgeon, both...
In 1878, at the height of his fame, Helmholtz asked what was objective in perception, declaring that...
This dissertation examines affect, rhetoric and aesthetics in relation to English thought of the sev...
We discuss John Locke's ideas in his essay of 1690 on sound and its cognition and relation to bodily...
How can someone have the right perception of sound and its nature? We hear sounds everywhere: we hea...
As Hogarth’s famous print, The Enraged Musician, makes clear, “sound” and “noise” are antithetical n...
The Government of the Senses is a study of how the changes in aesthetic culture that occurred in the...
In this fascinating collection of essays, an international group of scholars explores the sonic cons...
Sound Minds: Women’s Novels, Vibrational Experience, and the Listening Imagination in Nineteenth-Cen...
The oxford handbook of sound studies offers new and engaging perspectives on the significance of sou...
This essay began with a suspicion and a discomfort. The suspicion was that the pervasive theoretical...