German Idealism and the philosophy of music

  • Roger Scruton University of Oxford, UK
Keywords: German Idealism, Aesthetics, Romantics, Post-Kantian, Will

Abstract

German Idealism began with Leibniz and lasted until Schopenhauer, with a few central European after-shocks in the work of Husserl and his followers. That great epoch in German philosophy coincided with a great epoch in German music. It is scarcely surprising, therefore, that Idealist philosophers should have paid special attention to this art form. Looking back on it, is there anything of this prolonged encounter between music and philosophy that we can consider to be a real advance, and one that we should draw on? Many have thought so, not least because Idealism, as it matured in the post-Kantian period, inherited the adulation for art in general, and music in particular, that we find in the writings of the German Romantics, notably in Schiller, Tieck and Wackenroder. The post-Kantian Idealists connected aesthetic experience with their claims to reveal the secret meaning of things, in the infinite, the absolute, the transcendental, the ineffable or some other such object of a quasi-religious devotion. Such we find in the writings of Schelling, Fichte, Hegel and Schopenhauer, the last of whom made music not only an object of philosophy, but a prime example of it. Music, Schopenhauer wrote, is not unconscious arithmetic, as Leibniz had claimed, but unconscious philosophy, since in music the inner essence of the world, which is will, is made directly present to the intellect.

Author Biography

Roger Scruton, University of Oxford, UK

Roger Scruton is a Visiting Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oxford and University of Buckingham,
United Kingdom. PhD in Philosophy at the University of Cambridge. His main interests are in aesthetics,
philosophy of music and political philosophy. Has published books as Beauty: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford
University Press, 2011); The Face of God (Continuum, 2012); The Soul of the World (Princeton University Press,
2014); Music as an Art (Bloomsbury Continuum, 2018).

References

Valberg, Jerry J. (2007). Dream, Death and the Self. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Scruton, Roger (2012). The Face of God. London. Continuum.

Scruton, Roger (2014). The Soul of the World. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Hegel, George W. F. (1975). Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art, tr Knox. Oxford: Clarendon Press, vol. 2.

Dalhaus, Carl (1989). The Idea of Absolute Music, tr. Roger Lustig. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Eisler, Hanns (1973). ‘Musik und Politik’, in Schriften 1924 – 1948. Leipzig.

Levinas, Emanuel (2003). Humanism of the Other, tr. Nidra Poller. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.

Schelling, Friedrich W. J. (1802/3). Schriften zur Philosophie der Kunst und zur Freiheitslehre. Leipzig, F. Eckardt

Schopenhauer, Arthur (1958). The World as Will and Representation, tr. E.J.F. Payne. Colorado: Indian Hills.

Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1953). Philosophical Investigations. London: Macmillan Publishing Company.

Scruton, Roger (1997). The Aesthetics of Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Published
2018-12-31
How to Cite
[1]
Scruton, R. 2018. German Idealism and the philosophy of music. Disputatio. 7, 8 (Dec. 2018), a013. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2552958.
Section
Articles and Essays