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This book examines the intellectual history of instrumental music, in particular the idea of absolute music. It tries to show how certain ideas in philosophy, theology and the sciences affect the meaning and, indeed, the existence of instrumental music, and how, in turn, instrumental music is used to resolve or exemplify certain problems in modern culture. Instead of existing in a pure and autonomous form, music is woven back into the epistemological fabric and entangled with numerous discourses, thus demonstrating the centrality of music in the construction of meaning.
I'm a composer and musician. This book is really just about very obscure philosophical debates that, to me, seem only very tangentially related to actual music (which is my interest). It is in a very academic and over-written style, sprinkling in lots of German words to make sure we know this is a "serious philosophical treatise". it offers no insights at all into the music that is the starting point of the discussion. So - not for any one interested in music. Ph.Ds in philosophy - knock your elves out!