
The ‘Philosophy of Performance’ and the Performance of Philosophy
Author(s) -
Andrew Bowie
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
performance philosophy/performance philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2947-5589
pISSN - 2057-7176
DOI - 10.21476/pp.2015.1131
Subject(s) - subject (documents) , epistemology , philosophy of computer science , philosophy of sport , philosophy education , western philosophy , modern philosophy , domain (mathematical analysis) , philosophy , aesthetics , computer science , mathematics , mathematical analysis , library science
The notion of the 'philosophy of x', which has recently tended to become part of many subjects, from music to management, tends to obscure a range of important issues. The idea behind it seems to be that, by designating one's reflections on a subject as the ‘philosophy’ of whatever it is one is reflecting about, one achieves some kind of higher insight. Such an approach arguably grants too much to a subject whose main manifestation is actually endless disagreement on fundamental issues. In the light of this less flattering view of philosophy I want to suggest that we may sometimes achieve more by thinking of some of our practices, particularly in the aesthetic domain, as manifestations of what philosophy might become, rather than just thinking of those practices as objects of philosophical analysis.