The Sound of Ontology: Music as a Model for Metaphysics
By (Author) Kenneth LaFave
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
15th November 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy: aesthetics
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought
Theory of music and musicology
781.1
Hardback
140
Width 159mm, Height 238mm, Spine 16mm
349g
The Sound of Ontology: Music as a Model for Metaphysics explores connections between Western art music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the ideas that dominated philosophy leading up to and during that period. In the process of establishing John Cage as Richard Wagners heir via Arnold Schoenberg, the author discovers that the old metaphysics of representation is still in charge of how we think about music and about experience in general. Instead of settling for the positivist definition of music as mere sound framed by time, LaFave provides a phenomenology of music that reveals pitch as the ontological counterpart to frequency, and music as a vehicle for understanding how, as Heidegger observed, the Being of things of value are invariably grounded in the Being of things of nature. Numerous musical examples and a poem by Wallace Stevens illustrate LaFaves case that hierarchy is intrinsic to this understanding. Alfred North Whiteheads process philosophy is brought to bear alongside Heideggers phenomenological ontology to show that not only music, but reality itself, depends on a play of interlocking hierarchies to effect the nature-value connection, making aesthetics first philosophy.
Kenneth LaFave earned his PhD in philosophy at The European Graduate School.