Heidegger and Jazz: Musical Propositions of Truth and the Essence of Creativity

Item

Heidegger and Jazz: Musical Propositions of Truth and the Essence of Creativity
Philosophy of Music Education Review
21
2
120-135
2013
eng
1063-5734
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/philmusieducrevi.21.2.120
Creativity is inextricably linked to the ontology of being; as the history of philosophy frequently shows, it encompasses both the need to transform and be transformed. In this essay I examine the notion of “being creative” on the way to opening up our relationship to the essence of creativity, taking Heidegger's interpretation of essence as the way in which something is revealed and endures. I ask what is meant by a creative act and how does the harnessing of creativity compel it to do what it does. Such questioning requires thinking and, in the context of this essay, if we regard thinking as a set comprising hearing and seeing, then sensible hearing and seeing is taken into the realm of non-sensible perception, that is, “thinking.” I draw throughout almost exclusively on the writings of Heidegger and exemplify through factical considerations in jazz.

Source of record

This item was submitted on May 3, 2021 by Stéphane Audard using the form “Article de revue scientifique” on the site “BiblioJazz”: https://bibliojazz-collegium-musicae.huma-num.fr/s/bibliojazz