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Contents
Index 307
List of Contributors
The idea for this volume grew out of a panel on the titular subject matter
put together by myself, Roy T. Cook and Marcus Rossberg and presented
to the 2009 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Aesthetics held in
Denver, Colorado. I count myself stupendously lucky to have been able to
amass such a Murderers’ Row of frighteningly talented philosophers to
contribute to this volume; I am grateful to them all for their patience in
working with a first-time editor. I’d also like to extend special thanks to
Wylie Breckenridge for lending a critical eye, to L.A. Paul and Amie
Thomasson for their words of encouragement and support, to Donald
Baechler for so generously providing the fantastic cover image, and to
Peter Momtchiloff for his tireless editorial assistance.
Introduction: Art, Metaphysics,
and the Paradox of Standards
CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR*
I think it safe to say that philosophical aesthetics has had a less than stellar
record of its principal work being actively and substantively informed by
work in philosophical areas outside itself.1 Although I’m not entirely sure
what might fully explain the fact that aesthetics has for so long cultivated
a disturbingly insular character (or at least why it has achieved such a
reputation), I am quite certain that this protracted insularity has not only
effectively hobbled progress and productivity within philosophy of art
but also ostensibly poisoned any substantive and informative relationships
aesthetics might cultivate with outside areas (further fueling moves toward
insularity).
Of course, while I may share—or at least regard as neither hasty
nor terribly uncharitable—the view that aesthetics has to some extent
heretofore been a comparatively dim, unproductive, and deleteriously
insular area of philosophical enquiry, this should by no means suggest that
I also share the sadly not altogether uncommon outside sentiment that
* I would like to thank P.D. Magnus and L.A. Paul for helpful comments on earlier drafts.
1 After all, one needn’t look too hard to find a standard position within philosophical aesthetics that
runs directly counter to the relevant standard (if not received) positions in some other field (e.g. dominant
theories of art interpretation sharply diverging from the dominant theories of interpretation within
philosophy of language, well-established conceptual accounts of art and the aesthetic being predicated
upon highly controversial if not largely discredited theories of concepts within philosophy of mind,
object-kinds considered standard for art ontology being conspicuously absent from and utter alien-
looking within contemporary metaphysics). By contrast, consider the comparative ease in showing
the principal work within meta-ethics routinely and productively to engage with, and be informed by,
areas well outside itself (e.g. metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind and language, philosophy
of science).
2 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
2 For example, if art-theoretic considerations originally prompt metaphysical enquiry into the nature
of works of certain sort (e.g. music, film, literature), then the ontological conclusions drawn from such
enquiry ought to be consistent with those art-theoretic considerations. So, should these art-theoretic
considerations be promptly forgotten or ignored, we shouldn’t be at all surprised when the resultant
metaphysical enquiry answers with ontic models for works of that certain sort being at least indifferent to,
if not fundamentally at odds with, being an artwork.
4 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
things in the world satisfying (or having the capacity to satisfy) the conditions
for being art, whatever those may in fact be). From this, presumably one
would likewise expect the standard assumptions operative for any broad art-
ontological enquiry to be derived from, predicted by, or at least consistent
with the standard assumptions operative for any broad art-theoretic or general
ontological enquiry. After all, if the ontology of art lies at the intersection of
philosophy of art and metaphysics, then we should expect to locate the
standard views within the former where the standard views within the latter
two intersect—from the standard views within any of the two, we should be
able to arrive at some standard view within the third. The paradox of
standards (or at least the appearance of such) occurs when from the standard
views within any two domains we seem unable, upon pain of inconsis-
tency, to arrive at anything other than some decidedly non-standard view
within the third domain. Of course, the precise implications of the
paradox of standards (and the available resolutions thereof ) vary according
to the way in which one views the relationship between philosophical
aesthetics and contemporary metaphysics.
Consider again the following assumptions that within their respective
domains of enquiry appear to be not just standard but also at least prima facie
plausible (if not prima facie evident).3
I. There are such things as art-abstracta.
II. Abstracta are non-spatiotemporal and causally inert.
III. An artwork must be created.
Let’s begin by considering (I): The standard art-ontological assumption that
there are such things as art-abstracta.4
3 Predicated on these basic, standard assumptions are several further specified and standard positions,
out of which one can further construct several inconsistent sets. The main point here is that this threat of
inconsistency in standards can be avoided only by either outright denying one of the more basic, standard
assumptions at issue or implicitly doing so via adopting some non-standard position that itself cannot be
coherently predicated upon one of those more basic, standard assumptions.
4 The basic art-ontological argument for this I take to be pretty straightforward:
There are such things as artworks (Art-Realism).
Artworks are either repeatable or non-repeatable.
Repeatable artworks (or at least those of certain sorts) cannot be coherently or viably construed as
concrete things.
So, if there are such sorts of artworks, then those artworks must be abstract things.
There are such artworks.
So, there are such things as art-abstracta.
INTRODUCTION 9
5 Of course, within art ontology compete a wide variety of models of abstracta (e.g. unstructured
universals, indicated/initiated types, action-types, etc.). However, as to the general art-ontological
commitment to abstracta, any substantive debate has heretofore been largely and conspicuously absent.
6 Others may find art-abstracta inconsistent with the peculiarities of some pet theory of art with
which they have previously aligned (e.g. a particularly spartan aesthetic theory of art according to which
aesthetic properties are strictly perceptual, strictly supervene on the physical, and are strictly uninher-
itable from token to type). Others still may simply suspect such construal to have little to do with objects
as art. That is, while some members of the broad class of repeatable works appear patently to be artworks
(e.g. Moby Dick, Hamlet, The Magic Flute, Piano Concerto No. 9), the class of repeatable works
nevertheless remains a class for which being a member itself neither entails nor suggests being an artwork
(e.g. cookbooks and stereo-instruction manuals, Muzak and doorbell chimes, office memos and grocery
lists). So, the worry would then be what may be ontologically fertile for repeatable works simpliciter may
turn out to be decidedly toxic for those works as art or perhaps more simply that all of the philosophical
gravitas with which ontological debates about repeatable works of art (e.g. poems and symphonies) are
conducted would quickly turn into abject philosophical absurdity for any similarly conducted debate
10 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
matters for present purposes is that for those already located on the realist
side of the debate, commitment to art-realism standardly entails commitment
to art-abstracta.
Now consider (II): The standard metaphysical assumption that abstracta
are non-spatiotemporal and causally inert. To be sure, there are lively debates
within contemporary metaphysics about the precise nature of abstract
objects (including the method by which their natures ought to be charac-
terized). However, should any general characterization of abstracta have
a plausible claim to being standardly held, it clearly must be that abstracta
are non-causal (especially given the standard, broad characterization of
concreta as causally-efficacious material inhabitants of space-time).7
Lastly, consider (III): The standard art-theoretic assumption that an artwork
must be created. Presumably this can be best viewed as the standard expression
(or derivation) of one of the most basic and fundamentally intuitive necessary
conditions for something’s being art: An artwork must be the product of intentional
action.8 As such, any art-theoretic enquiry—either in terms of the supporting
claims therein or the resultant claims thereof—to be even prima facie viable as
such must be consistent with artworks being created things. Furthermore,
creation looks to require causation in the form of a causal chain from creator
to created—the standard sense of ‘create’ and its cognates is one indicating a
causal (if not causal-intentional) relation. As such, for any created thing, the
manner in which that thing comes into existence ought not be metaphysically
mysterious—in the case of artworks, they are the causal (causal-intentional)
products of some agential action.9
The source of the tension between the above three standard assumptions
should now be obvious if not also familiar.10 The standard art-ontological
about repeatable works of non-art (e.g. ringtones, wedding invitations, the Big Mac, the Corvette, and
so forth).
7 For instance, Gideon Rosen (2001) considers the view of abstracta as causally inert to be more or
less the standard view and so would presumably take his own contrarian account of abstracta (Burgess and
Rosen 1997) to be to that extent non-standard.
8 For a more detailed discussion of the nature of art’s intention-dependence, see (Mag Uidhir 2010).
9 For example, (Mid-Atlantic Ridge volcanoes were created by divergent tectonic plates) is stan-
dardly taken to entail Mid-Atlantic Ridge volcanoes being caused by divergent tectonic plates. Likewise,
(Sara created a doghouse) is standardly taken to entail Sara having successfully engaged in such-and-such
activities directed by so-and-so intentions, the causal product of which was a thing satisfying the
conditions for being a doghouse, whatever those may be.
10 A standard debate within the ontology of music centers around how to resolve the paradox of
creation: (i) musical works are abstracta; (ii) musical works are created; (iii) abstracta cannot be created.
INTRODUCTION 11
story tells us that given but the simplest investigation of and reflection
upon the nature of putatively repeatable artworks and the relevant sur-
rounding practices and conventions (both linguistic and otherwise), any
minimally defensible and coherent art-realism must construe repeatable art
as abstract such that any minimally adequate art-realism must entail that
there are such things as art-abstracta. However, from the standard meta-
physical story about abstracta it follows not only that such things must be
causally inert but also that if such things exist, then there can be no time at
which those things do not exist—if they exist, they exist eternally. Fur-
thermore, from the standard art-theoretic story about artwork creation, it
follows that if something is a created thing, then there must be a time at
which that thing did not exist—a created thing cannot exist prior to its
creation and so cannot exist eternally. Further follows yet another standard
assumption about creation, namely that creation requires causation—
created things must stand in a causal (if not causal-intentional) relation
to their creators.11 However, if abstracta must be causally inert, then as
such, abstracta must be things incapable of standing in any causal relation
whatsoever, let alone one in the robust causal-intentional sense of creation
standardly assumed to underwrite the art-theoretic commitment to art-
works being the products of intentional actions.12 Accordingly, there can
be no such thing that is a created abstracta (an exclusionary fact which the
standard characterizations of abstracta and creation clearly overdetermine).
So, if there are such things as artworks and artworks must be created
things, then artworks cannot be abstracta.
Clearly an inconsistency is afoot. More importantly, however, the
rather surprising, if not also disturbing, philosophical consequence of
this inconsistency is that what actually lies at the intersection between
our standard art-theoretic commitments and our standard metaphysical
commitments is not some standard art-ontological commitment but
instead the explicit negation of such.13 Again, the most interesting feature
11 It would then also follow that when considered relationally, creating any one kind of artwork
(e.g. those of the standardly repeatable variety such as novels, symphonies, operas) ought to be
metaphysically indistinct from creating an artwork of any other kind (e.g. those of the standardly non-
repeatable variety such as painting, sculpture, drawing).
12 This would also be the view of creation standard within contemporary metaphysics (French and
Vickers 2011).
13 Consider the following crude but useful analogy. Suppose we have what appears to be a perfectly
standard and straightforward recipe for gazpacho soup. However, when we follow this recipe
12 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
of the paradox of standards lies not in the nature of the inconsistency itself
but rather in what that inconsistency—both itself as well as the available
means by which it can be resolved—reveals about the current state of art
ontology.
Ultimately, the available means by which one may resolve the para-
dox of standards (and the implications thereof) depends entirely upon
how one chooses to view the relationship between philosophy of art and
contemporary metaphysics. In what follows, I discuss the resolutions to
the paradox of standards consistent with preserving the standard art-
ontological commitment to art-abstracta presumably available to those
adopting deference and to those choosing independence. I then show
that neither view can offer any adequate resolution to the paradox
consistent with commitment to art-abstracta at least proportional to
what is philosophically at stake (e.g. resolving the paradox by either
bankrupting art-realism or by making all artworld onta hopelessly sui
generis). As such, I claim we ought to adopt a third view regarding the
relationship between philosophy of art and contemporary metaphysics—
what I call the reciprocity view. This view allows us to dissolve
rather than resolve the paradox of standards as from reciprocity it
looks as if putatively standard art-ontological enquiry concerns neither
art nor ontology and therefore to that extent is an ‘ontology of art’ in
name only.
perfectly step-by-step the result is not as expected—a chilled vegetarian soup—but instead something
surprisingly far from it—a piping-hot beef stew. Furthermore, despite the fact that each step in our recipe
for gazpacho soup at no point seems anything other than perfectly standard and straightforward,
we nevertheless find that actually making gazpacho soup requires us at some point to deviate from
that recipe, specifically by replacing one of its seemingly standard and straightforward steps with a
decidedly non-standard and counter-intuitive alternative (or simply by skipping some such standard step
altogether).
INTRODUCTION 13
16 Of course, for positions such as Dodd’s sonicism to be consistent with standard art-theoretic
assumptions, one need only qualify the relevant domain at issue. That is, if musical works must be
construed according to the characterization of abstracta standard within contemporary metaphysics, then
musical works cannot be artworks. So, for Dodd’s sonicism to be art-theoretically responsible, he need
only claim its domain to extend no further than musical works simpliciter such that sonicism is a position
within musical ontology rather than a position within the ontology of art. Whether the addition of the
claim that musical works cannot be artworks would somehow now render his view untenable is a matter
best discussed elsewhere.
INTRODUCTION 15
17 Perhaps what the previous analysis has shown with respect to deference and the ontology of art is
that the degree to which art ontology is deferential to the standard characterization of abstracta within
contemporary metaphysics is the degree to which there being artworks so construed either runs afoul of
basic art-theoretic considerations or fails to make adequate sense of the relevant surrounding art practices
and conventions.
16 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
18 To be sure, there are those within contemporary metaphysics who argue for alternative (non-
standard) views of abstract objects: e.g. see Hale (1987) and Burgess and Rosen (1997).
19 For example, Amie Thomasson—most notably in (1999)—claims fictional characters to be abstract
artifacts. However, the more such accounts employ (or are at least implicitly predicated upon) standard
notions of create and artifact the less fictional characters look traditionally abstract and the more they
instead look to be concreta (if not of the traditional sort then at least some exotic variant thereof).
INTRODUCTION 17
20 For example, Amie Thomasson (2007, 2008, 2010) advances a meta-ontological position according
to which ontological enquiry ought to be a combination of conceptual analysis and empirical investi-
gation. My worry here is that philosophers of art already sympathetic to independence may unreflec-
tively consider Thomasson’s work in art ontology (2006, 2010) to license appeal to putatively sui generis
onta within their own work and thereby neglect to consider the fact that doing so entails some pretty
hefty and sweeping meta-ontological consequences that extend well beyond the domain of ontological
enquiry into art.
18 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
extent, ‘ontology of art’ in name only. That such results are less than
philosophically palatable I take to suggest that we should view the relation-
ship between philosophy of art and metaphysics in a manner other than that
of deference or independence. Instead, we ought to adopt the view from
which the most art-theoretically and metaphysically responsible ontology
of art can follow.21
21 A metaphysician might wonder why philosophers of art do not simply abandon the appeal to
abstracta in favor of a neo-Aristotelian account of universals such as D.M. Armstrong’s (1978) view
according to which universals are multiply located but nevertheless concrete, which would allow for
repeatable artworks to be both spatiotemporally located and causally active without thereby collapsing
into art-ontological nominalism (thanks to L.A. Paul for suggesting this). Of course, given that ante rem
realism (i.e. universals wholly exist outside their instantiations) promises no improvement over the
abstracta model, one must be an in re realist about repeatable artworks (i.e. that they wholly exist within
their instantiations) in order to avoid the paradox of standards. However, the in re realist position looks
no less potentially revisionary with respect to the way in which the folk talk about artworks than would
any standard nominalist construal. More precisely, if making sense of the relevant surrounding practices
and conventions explain the appeal to abstracta in the first place, then I suspect that an ontic model
according to which Moby Dick is currently (and simultaneously) located in Paris, Dallas, Angkor Wat,
and Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station would likely prove ill-suited for those with descriptivist
inclinations.
INTRODUCTION 19
22 For example, should standard metaphysical commitments preclude coherent realism about the sorts
of things standardly taken to be paragons of human achievement (e.g. Moby Dick, Hamlet, The Magic
Flute, The Eroica Symphony), those commitments nevertheless being consistent with some banal realism
about tables, chairs, and lumps of clay should provide any metaphysician naught but cold comfort.
Similarly, any responsible philosophy of language conducting enquiry into aesthetic or taste predicates
ought to be consistent with and be informed by the very domain within which such predicates are
standard parts of the critical discourse.
23 Interestingly from this it seems to follow that one method aestheticians could employ to ensure
purchase in a responsible metaphysics is to model ontological categories for art after those responsibly in
play for species which perhaps suggests that any aesthetician holding a dim view of contemporary
metaphysics should consider instead adopting reciprocity with respect to the relationship between
aesthetics and philosophy of science. For related issues in the relationship between metaphysics and
philosophy of science, see Paul (2012).
20 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
24 After all, the ontic categories standardly available within contemporary metaphysics being insuffi-
cient to support anything other than a bankrupt art-realism rather strongly suggests their being likewise
insufficient to support realism about any other product of intention action—if there are no such things as
films, novels, paintings, plays, poems, sculptures, songs, and symphonies, then surely just as equally
unreal must be such things as chairs, commercials, governments, grocery lists, instruction manuals,
nations, office memos, ringtones, and tables.
INTRODUCTION 21
25 On a purely speculative front, I think that should aesthetics experience anything approximating a
philosophical upheaval in the near future, it most likely will be in the form of nominalism establishing
itself as the dominant art-ontological position.
22 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
sort than the relevant works of any putatively more mundane sort (e.g.
poems no more ontologically special a thing than office memos, novels
no stranger sort an object than stereo-instruction manuals, and symphonies
no more metaphysically complex than advertising jingles) and thereby
accordingly expect the ontology of art and the ontology of ordinary objects
to be similarly populated at least with respect to the models their respective
study takes to be available.
Of course, we can further specify the implications of reciprocity by
taking it together with the preference for either revisionary or descriptivist
art ontology. For instance, were we to endorse reciprocity along with a
descriptivist model, it would follow that we ought to count as legitimate
ontic kinds for art ontology all and only those ontic kinds standard within
contemporary metaphysics sufficiently able to adequately capture art
practices and conventions. Notice, however, that on such a view, the likely
consequence of the ontological categories standard within contemporary
metaphysics proving insufficient for adequately capturing basic art practices
and conventions is a bankrupt realism about artworks. Of course, no matter
how deeply held our art-realism may be, it surely must have some threshold
that once crossed (e.g. via recourse to ontological gerrymandering and sui
generis ontic kinds) can no longer be held without revision (i.e. any prima
facie viable realism for artworks must entail nominalism about art-abstracta)
or cannot be held simpliciter (i.e. there can be no viable realism for artworks
and so, there can be no such things that are artworks). By contrast, were we
to endorse reciprocity along with a revisionary model, we ought, all else
being equal, to count as legitimate ontic kinds for art ontology all and only
those ontic kinds standard within contemporary metaphysics sufficiently
able to adequately capture basic art practices and conventions. All else
not being equal, however, we ought to hold purely metaphysical/logical
considerations (e.g. ontological parsimony) as trumping any subsequently
accrued revisions to art practice and convention.
Ultimately, the general methodological implication of reciprocity, at
least with respect to art and abstracta, is that if works of a certain sort, absent
art-theoretic considerations, are best construed as abstracta, then it does not
likewise follow that the putative art status of works of that certain sort
thereby entails or suggests abstracta as a legitimate ontic kind for artworks.
Simply put, our principal methodology should not consist of (i) inquiring as
to the putatively art-relevant sorts of works; (ii) constructing ontic models
INTRODUCTION 23
best suited for works of those sorts (not as artworks but as works of those
sorts simplicter); (iii) declaring the resultant constructed ontic kinds legitimate
kinds for art ontology; then (iv) deflecting charges of practicing capricious
metaphysics via an unreflective, cherry-picked appeal to some controversial
and sweepingly revisionary methodological or meta-ontological indict of
general ontological enquiry itself at least as standardly conducted.26 Rather,
we must first enquire as to the sort of thing an artwork must minimally be
(e.g. the product of intentional action), look to contemporary metaphysics
to find the general ontic kinds consistent with that minimal account, and
then, and only then, can we responsibly ground a legitimate art-ontological
domain (and declare those ontic kinds exhaustive of its limits).
The principal methodological lesson that follows, should we decide to
adopt reciprocity, is that the more we find art ontology to reckon
as legitimate metaphysically queer or sui generis kinds of things, the more
we ought to suspect art ontology of being either blind to basic art-theoretic
considerations or principally motivated by considerations well beyond the
purview of contemporary metaphysics—either way an ‘ontology of art’ in
name only. This suggests that at least insofar as we want to be art-realists,
adopting reciprocity may well require seriously reconsidering, revising,
or perhaps even outright rejecting many of our basic art-ontological
assumptions. Any sustained fruitful exchange between philosophy of art
and contemporary metaphysics must be located at the points within each
where the one takes the other seriously, and as such, the extent to which we
allow these points of exchange to remain absent is the extent to which
the methodologies guiding the relevant enquiries remain philosophically
irresponsible and ipso facto the extent to which the result of any such enquiry
so guided is not itself worth taking seriously.27
26 After all, we should be shocked to find that merely something’s being art requires it to be radically
ontically distinct from its nearest non-art kin.
27 To be sure, the last decade or so has seen a dramatic increase in the number of significant and
exciting exchanges between aesthetics and putatively core philosophical areas, not just in the more
obvious overlap areas (e.g. the nature of fiction and theory of depiction) but also in areas traditionally
considered to be largely in the domain of philosophical aesthetics (e.g. the ontology of music, aesthetic
concepts, predicates, judgments, and testimony). Ideally this recent increase in philosophy of art’s
exchange rate would be the product of some newly fashioned methodology driven by a heretofore
largely absent general, serious, and substantive philosophical concern for all things art and aesthetic.
However, the less than ideal fact of the matter is that often such exchanges seem to progress in a manner
incommensurate, if not outright inconsistent, with their being substantively, let alone principally,
motivated or constrained by basic art-theoretic considerations. As such, this increase is perhaps best
24 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
viewed not so much as the product of a philosophical appreciation for aesthetics as a philosophical
appropriation from aesthetics.
28 The difference, of course, being that to move from reciprocity to independence no longer
requires that art be in principle ontologically sui generis.
INTRODUCTION 25
V. Conclusion
In the end, I take the paradox of standards (or at least the appearance
thereof) neither to impugn the general philosophical merits of work
currently being done within the ontology of art nor—despite my own
thoroughgoing art-ontological nominalism—to vindicate any particular
view therein. What the paradox of standards ultimately reveals is that insofar
as philosophers of art and metaphysicians view the relationship between
their respective domains in terms of independence or deference, neither
can responsibly conduct philosophical enquiry at what would otherwise
be eminently productive and informative points of exchange. Absent
the move toward reciprocity, metaphysicians will likely continue to
inexplicably neglect the paragon sorts of human achievement (whilst
fretting over how best to make sense of its utterly banal kin) and philoso-
phers of art will likely respond in similar fashion by defaulting to the
metaphysical queerness of art (thereby further retreating into insularity
and obsolescence).
For any philosophical enquiry at the relevant overlap areas between aes-
thetics and other domains to be responsible and productive comes at a price, a
price all participating sides must pay. To be sure, philosophy of art looks to
bear most of the expense; however, the other side nevertheless incurs a non-
negligible cost in that at the end of the day, it must make sense of art.29
References
Armstrong, D.M. (1978) Universals and Scientific Realism, 2 vols (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press)
Burgess, John and Rosen, Gideon (1997) A Subject with No Object (Oxford: Oxford
University Press)
Dodd, Julian (2007) Works of Music: An Essay in Ontology (Oxford: Oxford Uni-
versity Press)
29 In this minimal yet substantive sense, for example, ought philosophy of art itself inform contem-
porary metaphysics, and in so doing might philosophy of art then come to stand in the same sort of
relation to metaphysics (with all due respect and apologies to philosophy of science) as applied ethics does
to meta-ethics.
26 CHRISTY MAG UIDHIR
French, Steven and Vickers, Peter (2011) ‘Are There No Things that are Scientific
Theories?’ British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 62(4): 771–804
Hale, Bob (1987) Abstract Objects (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Mag Uidhir, Christy (2010) ‘Failed-Art and Failed Art-Theory’ Australasian Journal
of Philosophy 88: 381–400
Paul, L.A. (2012) ‘Metaphysics as Modeling: The Handmaiden’s Tale’ Philosophical
Studies (April, 27)
Rosen, Gideon (2001) ‘Abstract Objects’ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Thomasson, Amie (1999) Fiction and Metaphysics (Cambridge: Cambridge Univer-
sity Press)
——(2006) ‘Debates about the Ontology of Art: What are We Doing Here?’
Philosophy Compass 1(3): 245–55
——(2007) Ordinary Objects. Oxford University Press
——(2008) ‘Existence Questions.’ Philosophical Studies 141(1): 63–78
——(2010) ‘Ontological Innovation in Art’ Journal of Aesthetics & Art Criticism
68(2): 119–30
I
General Ontological Issues
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1
Must Ontological Pragmatism
be Self-Defeating?
GUY ROHRBAUGH
We surely live in a golden age for the ontology of art. What was once a staid
and simple debate has given way to an ever more complex landscape
of views, arguments, and fine distinctions. Part of this is due to a wider
resurgence in metaphysics trickling down into aesthetics, but part of it is also
due to an increasing recognition that works of art present their own
independently interesting challenges. This volume is itself a manifestation
of both tendencies. Perhaps the surest sign of a newly achieved maturity is
the recent, reflexive focus on methodological questions. It has suddenly
seemed worth asking what it is we think we are doing, how we are doing it,
and what the measures of success and failure in this endeavor look like.
I. Pragmatism
When we turn to methodology, it is heartening to find a surprising measure
of agreement on at least one basic point: Answers to methodological
questions are constrained in some way by the practice of art itself. What
this constraint amounts to in detail is, of course, a matter of dispute, but I do
not think that anyone really disagrees with the general idea and it is easy
enough to say why. Whatever works of art are, they manifest themselves in
the world primarily—if not solely in the case of repeatable works—through
our practices. Artworks are, in the first place, the objects of that thought,
action, perception, and judgment, which together make up the apprecia-
tive, productive, art-historical, commercial, and critical practices of the
30 GUY ROHRBAUGH
It is fair to say that this approach has faced some difficulties, for none
of these usual suspects have seemed a particularly good match to the
description of the suspect. A lot of ink has been spilled trying to resolve
the tension between creatability and repeatability, with abstractness as
the troublesome middle term. I myself have raised difficulties accounting
for the modal and temporal features of artworks (Rohrbaugh 2003).
Perceptibility and abstractness play poorly together. Proposals that sidestep
many of these issues, like David Davies’ (2004) performance tokens, can
seem incredible on every other score. The discontents are familiar.
Perhaps in reaction to this, a second, alternative motivating picture
sometimes seems to be at work, one that invokes a kind of Copernican
turn of thought. On this picture, it is not the role of our practices to supply
identifying information about the objects of our concern. Rather, our
practices are thought to play some kind of constitutive role, furnishing the
world with their objects through our very inhabiting of them. It is hard not
to avail oneself of dark metaphors here—‘the practices are the very fabric of
the objects of their concern,’ ‘objects that conform to our cognitions,’ and
suchlike—but at the level of motivating pictures, it is clear enough what
broad idea is intended. Both of our prior commitments have been shed, or
traded for new ones. Where the practices are literally productive of their
ontology, there can be no question of massive error nor need we make
out antecedent ontological candidates.
Something like this is surely at work in Peter Lamarque’s (2010) distinc-
tion between work and object, where the existence of a work over and
above some mere object is a matter of on-going appropriate cultural
conditions. Amie Thomasson’s (2004, 2005, 2006) work also seems
informed by this movement between pictures. Although Thomasson
often describes the work of our individuative practices as ‘disambiguating
reference,’ which still suggests a first-picture goal of latching on to one
among several candidates, the heart of her conception is a neo-Carnapian
(contrasting with the overtly Quinean feel of the first picture) view on
which the only meaningful existence and identity questions are ‘internal’
ones, settled by asking whether the conditions set by our own linguistic
usage are met. Where these conditions concern our own activities, as they
do in the case of our artistic practices, their reflexive character leaves no
room for massive error nor need for candidates understood antecedently to
the framework; the existence of (adequate?) practices as they are guarantees
32 GUY ROHRBAUGH
the existence of the works as conceived by the practice. One might also be
tempted to assimilate the contrast between these two pictures to Strawson’s
(1959, pp. 9–12) contrast between descriptive and revisionary metaphysics,
but it is not clear that the two line up in a helpful way. Both pictures
we have sketched might rightly be called ‘descriptive’ in virtue of their
pragmatic commitments and contrasted with views in general metaphysics
that Strawson thought of as revisionary.
II. Deflationism
The first sort of worry concerns ontologically deflationary views in the
ontology of art. My purpose here is not to confront specific arguments
or even positions characterized in any significant detail, but to diagnose
underlying motivations. What I have in mind is manifested clearly in recent
papers by Ross Cameron (2008), who advises a brand of eliminativism about
artworks, and Andrew Kania (2008), who instead urges a increasingly-
familiar fictionalist project. Both writers surely fall within the widest
understanding of our pragmatist methodology, as each is motivated to
preserve the appearances of our practices—in word at least—and each
thinks of his own position as giving as good an account of those practices
as we are likely to get.
In Cameron’s case, this is largely a matter of incoherence within practice,
which leaves no candidate suitable, primarily the conflict between
creatability and abstractness. While Cameron is not an error theorist in
the traditional sense, as his view accords truth to our usual beliefs and
utterances, he holds that the best explanation of their truth involves no
commitment to the objects they purport to be about but instead makes
straight appeal to some more basic ontology, provisionally, arrangements
of simples and abstract structures (Cameron 2008). Given the role of
antecedent ontology and a willingness to countenance massive error, or
some more subtle but related failure, this is a first picture sort of approach.
His engagement with the rest of us is spoiled, I think, by his insistence that
proper ontology can only be understood as a concern with what exists
‘fundamentally,’ and that what does not exist fundamentally does not exist
full stop. Even assuming the availability of a conceptual register in which to
make this claim (cf. Predelli 2009), taking this on board pretty much short
MUST ONTOLOGICAL PRAGMATISM BE SELF-DEFEATING? 33
circuits the projects the rest of us are interested in and leaves us with an
unpromising verbal dispute about how we are using terms like ‘exists’ and
‘ontology.’ I do not think anyone actually disagrees with Cameron’s claim
that works of art are not ontologically fundamental, but nor does anyone
think this much matters. As is often the case with skeptical positions, the
import does not lie in any kind of genuine habitability but in the pressure it
exerts in highlighting a philosophical problem, here, how are we to account
for the unity enjoyed by a musical work.
Kania is more interesting, as he starts out less non-negotiably far from
ongoing debates while animated by the same underlying tendencies as
Cameron. In Kania’s story, the ontology of art starts with Wollheim
(1980), Wolterstorff (1980), Kivy (1993), and Goodman (1968) working
only implicitly within our first picture and informed largely by traditional
debates about universals. What they are doing is straight metaphysics, or an
application of it. The aforementioned troubles arise when later figures pay
more attention to the details of our practices and the ways in which they fail
to square with the imported, traditional ontologies. Something very like our
second picture, embodied in the work of David Davies (2004) and myself
(2003), with Jerrold Levinson (1980) cast as a transitional figure, then
emerges in reaction to these pressures. All claim that attention to and respect
for our practices requires some kind of novelty when it comes to
the underlying ontology.
At this point, the structure of a dilemma is said to emerge. We, or at least
Levinson and I (the story for Davies is different), are said to face a problem
squaring our views with the demands of traditional metaphysics. We
describe objects that fit our practices to a tee and then proceed to claim
that there are such objects. Unfortunately, they are not there. Any number
of critics, myself included, have pointed out that the idea of an indicated
type does not really make much sense (e.g. Predelli 2001, pp. 288–9;
Rohrbaugh 2003, p. 199). Despite what Levinson says, one cannot help
but think that he has latched onto the same uncreated types only through a
particular guise, and that saying ‘a new object comes to be’ lacks the
performative oomph it needs. In my own case, Julian Dodd (2004, 2007)
has pressed worries regarding the availability of the very conceptual space
such a view would need, and any number have asked, ‘but what are those
historical individuals you claim to identify?’ Indeed, a sober assessment of
my own paper might find only a negative argument, one that establishes
34 GUY ROHRBAUGH
the result of moving from the first to the second picture, allowing the
demands of practice to do all the work while shrugging off the demands
of straight, respectable metaphysics. But instead of ending up with a picture
on which our practices give rise to the very objects of their own concern,
we instead end up with, quite literally, nothing.
III. Species
This deflationist narrative loses its grip, of course, if we think there are
perfectly acceptable candidates for the role. Much of the work in my (2003)
paper was negative. It highlighted aspects of the practices surrounding
repeatable works of art—their temporal and modal flexibility, their under-
lying temporal and ontologically dependent natures—that together suggest
the profile, not of a type or universal, but of a historical individual,
something concrete in time with the rest of us, though one dependent on
a causal flow of more basic individuals. I also suggested that we already had a
model for understanding such things in biological species. The parallels
between the cases are striking, especially the need to combine a kind of
repeatability with a real, individual presence in time. My passing, and all too
brief, suggestion is filled out in much greater detail by P.D. Magnus (2012,
this volume, Ch. 5), who reminds us that biologists and philosophers of
biology have routinely worked with a conception of species-as-individuals
for more than four decades. The idea of an individual-with-occurrences
turns out to be, not a novel invention or bit of recherche metaphysics,
but well-credentialed member of our set of antecedently available
ontological options.
There is a risk here, however, that the contagion will simply cross over to
biology. This is not just a matter of some theorists adopting an anti-realist
stance toward species as well as artworks, as Hazlett (2012, this volume,
Ch. 7) does, or of art ontologists claiming species as further examples of their
own theories, as do Dodd (2007, p. 33) and Levinson (1980, p. 81), but of
what look like genuinely unsettled issues within the philosophy of biology
over their status. As Magnus says, ‘there are different ways of filling in
the metaphysical details of the view that musical works are historical
individuals,’ (Magnus, this volume, Ch. 5, p. 119) and the details might
matter.
36 GUY ROHRBAUGH
IV. Explanation
It is at just this point that Robert Kraut (forthcoming) presses new worries.
While also acknowledging the broad point with which we began,
he worries that the pragmatic methodology, while unavoidable, cannot
perform the work it must do. He too begins by connecting the project of
ontology with explanation:
If such an inquiry is to make any sense, it must be construed as an effort to provide
adequate explanations of customary artworld practices—creation, interpretation,
evaluation, and commodification—by adverting to the sorts of things artworks are;
their ontological status is part of the explanation of why they are treated, or ought
to be treated, in one way rather than another . . . It is because of what Stravinsky’s
Rite of Spring is that it can be performed simultaneously in widely separated concert
halls; it is because of what Picasso’s Guernica is that a forged copy of it lacks the
aesthetic value of the original. (Kraut, forthcoming)
But it is these very demands that Kraut alleges a pragmatic approach to the
ontology of art cannot satisfactorily shoulder. In essence, his worry is that, to
the degree that we are simply codifying regularities we find within our
practices, the less we are able to claim that the ontologies arrived at on that
basis give any genuine explanation of why we do what we do or, worse,
why what we do is legitimated or justified by the kinds of objects with
which they are concerned. Or again, an ontology ultimately driven by a
description of what it is we already do, as it must if it is be to an ontology of
art at all, looks like it will be unable to turn around and informatively
explain or justify any of those doings we described. As he sees it, the
alternative is a bald skeptical position. One might say that there is no such
endeavor as the ontology of art. Rather, when one asks, ‘What sort of thing
is a symphony?’ what one really gets in response is just an expression of the
speaker’s own aesthetic views about what is and is not important about
symphonies, in short, ideology. It would be possible to generalize further
38 GUY ROHRBAUGH
about these attitudes across one or another population, but one would be
doing sociology and not philosophy.
It is pretty clear from his discussion that it is our first picture that Kraut has
in mind, and it is true that many or most ontologists of art would describe
their project in these terms. Their positive applications of the methodology
are meant to have the form of an inference to the best explanation, one that
is modeled on successful applications of this inference in empirical domains.
In the case of, say, the type theory, most authors are self-consciously explicit
that the arguments have this form and that the identification of repeatable
works with types is supposed to be justified by our ability to explain their
repeatability, their distinctness from their occurrences, and so on.
Kraut’s resistance to this picture is not so much motivated by the mis-
match between candidates and data as by what strikes him as a fairly obvious
disanalogy with the scientific case. Over there, ontology understood as
inference to the best explanation makes sense because the nature of the
entities goes beyond the descriptions through which we got onto
them. That is really the point of demanding that the candidate entities be
understood antecedently. If you go in for this kind of talk, the power
of finding that some brain state or other plays the belief role lies in the
way a whole new set of properties and laws, which played no role in
the specification of the role, subsume, connect, and explain the features
that did play an identifying role. In contrast, the objects this method is
supposed to get us onto in the art case do not take us much beyond the
phenomena we started with. A particular type is the sort of thing that has
tokens, those which meet the conditions that give that type its very identity
as an object. His suspicion is that we are just repeating back to ourselves
what we started with using new terminology, and if that is true then we
ought to be more honest about it and adopt an expressivist account.
Such worries might seem to afflict the second-picture conception even
more pointedly. Thought of in Kania’s way, as an ultra-thorough going
descriptivist project that ultimately dispenses with any accountability to
genuine objects and the concerns of metaphysics, all we are left with is a
statement of what we say, and that would seem to have nothing to say to
Kraut’s request for explanations and justifications. So too, it might be
thought to stand as a challenge to Thomasson’s way of approaching matters.
As she summarizes part of her view;
MUST ONTOLOGICAL PRAGMATISM BE SELF-DEFEATING? 39
[S]ince facts about the ontology of the work of art are determined by human
conceptions, the resulting facts are, as we might say, ontologically shallow—there
is nothing more to discover about them than what our practices themselves
determine. We can investigate the world to see if it meets those criteria that are
clearly accepted by our practices, and we can try to investigate our practices more
closely to see if they might provide a nonarbitrary way to decide a particular issue
(say, by extending principles accepted elsewhere). Beyond that, any solutions to
these problems must be presented as suggestions or proposals about how we should
(stipulatively) decide such issues, not as discoveries of the real facts. (Thomasson
2005, p. 228)
On the face of it, the kind of ‘shallowness’ Thomasson allows the ontology
of art precludes just the sort explanations and justifications that Kraut thinks
it needs to earn its keep. This is, I suppose, to ignore the further possibility
of purely pragmatic disputes about which kind of terms we should work
with, or why talk one way rather than another, but here again Kraut is likely
to push the thought that we can have no more grounded a conversation
than one in which I push my concerns and you push yours, and this is just
the ontology of ideology offered above.
V. Structures of Thought
There is a moment in the Kania piece that draws my attention each time
I read it. I will quote it for you here:
For if a ‘pragmatic’, descriptivist approach to the ontology of art is the correct one,
then it is not clear what force such appeals to general metaphysical claims or
theories should have. If in proposing a theory of the ontology of art we are really
offering a description of the ‘structure of our thought’ about artworks, then the
existence and nature of such philosophical arcana as types, properties, and so on,
look like they might be beside the point. (Kania 2008, p. 437)
are types of sound events might equally be understood as a claim about the
structure of certain judgments, that they are represented as involving a
certain familiar kind of generality.
The suggestion I want to consider is this. In taking oneself to investigate
the structure of thought, understood in this particularly robust way, one
need not abandon the notion that one is doing general metaphysics after all,
for the forms of judgment one discovers and elucidates aren’t really
any different than the arcane objects of concerns to traditional metaphysics.
I have said that the ontology of art calls for innovation in general metaphys-
ics. At the time, I would have been happy to say that we need, indeed
already had need of, new sorts of objects. Putting it this way invites
the question, ‘But which objects?’ But we might put the same thought
in another way here, that talk of kind of objects is, in a way, dispensable
and what is really at issue is the forms of thought that undergird the
phenomena we find in our practices. What we are on the lookout for
here is not another theory pitched at a level like that of Gregory Currie’s
(1989) overall art-historical theory or the ramsification of our collective
artwork platitudes or what have you, for such theories are set apart from,
say, a theory of orbital dynamics or global trade by their content. The
practices that make up the artworld are important to ontologists because it
is through the underlying forms of judgment employed within them that we
find our way to their ontology.
Kania quotes another bit of my text earlier on as evidence of my
commitment to pragmatism, but it is one I think I may understand better
now than when I wrote it:
[A] properly conceived ontology of art is one which provides a metaphysical
framework flexible enough to represent accurately a wide variety of phenomena
and to permit the expression of heterogeneous critical views, views which must
be evaluated in their own terms. Ontologies of art are beholden to our artistic
practices . . . and the critical debates are part of the practices to be captured. It is the
job of the metaphysician to provide the space for further argument, not to cut it
off by fiat. (Kania 2008, pp. 432–3; Rohrbaugh 2003, p. 179)
One point I was registering was that about securing our subject matter, that
with which we began. A second point regards my pretty fervent objection
to the use of ontological or metaphysical claims to bolster particular,
properly aesthetic views. If you are arguing that musical pieces ought to
42 GUY ROHRBAUGH
judgments, then these will be forms shared by the judgments of the dispu-
tants. To lose this is to lose the idea that we have disagreement in place at all.
For Levinson, these observations are just a way to get us onto the further
idea of particularized or contextualized structure, one that requires of
its instances both complex auditory properties and a certain history and
means of production. But I think we should stop short of this and focus on
the idea of a miniature practice, for it is this thing which the composer
plausibly brings into existence, and which is both individual and repeatably
manifestable.
MUST ONTOLOGICAL PRAGMATISM BE SELF-DEFEATING? 45
It is easy to miss this idea by focusing on the rule that Levinson mentions,
for the content of a rule is such that it can be satisfied or not and thus
suggests a condition of the sort which animates our notion of a type.
But what makes a rule a rule is not this content, but lies in the wider
inferential and practical role (our forms of thought again) such content
plays, here, its embeddedness in practice. Just as we should not confuse
the structure of a work with the work itself, so too we should not confuse
the content of a particular practice with the practice itself, what has that
content. What is philosophically crucial here is that the relation of a practice
to what manifests it (even ‘instantiates’ it, if you like) is entirely different
from the relation between some condition—even the very condition
that correctly describes the rules of that practice—and what satisfies it.
What makes a particular performance of a performance of Chopin’s Piano
Concerto No. 1 is not that it instantiates some particular structure—even a
contextualized or particularized structure—shared with all the others,
but rather that is manifests a particular practice, one that is correctly
described in terms of a structure (though it can be a pure one; the
work that ‘particularlized’ or ’contextualized’ was doing has now already
been done).
I am sure that, on hearing this, some will insist on understanding it simply
as the proposal of a new, causal condition on tokens, like the spatio-
temporally restricted types of the biologist, but this is to give up the
philosophical dividends of recognizing a genuine individual here. Perhaps
individual practices can be classified, sorted into practice types (genres and
art forms), but it is token practices we are interested in here, and along this
dimension they are particulars, not instantiated in sub-practices. They are
also general or repeatable items, for they may be manifested over and over
again in the actions they inform and guide, but the sense of ‘instance’ we are
talking about here has shifted.
Among those dividends are precisely the phenomena I attributed to
artworks in my (2003). An individual practice is the sort of thing that can
come to be and pass away at particular points in history. Levinson is right to
focus on the sort of activity that generates such a thing, and we know
that practices survive only through being lived by their participants.
Such things can die out. They are also the sort of thing that can change
over time, sometimes deliberately and reflectively, sometimes not. The very
conditions, rules, and norms that characterize one can shift without thereby
46 GUY ROHRBAUGH
shifting the identity of the practice which accepts them. We are, I think,
well familiar both with attempts to change such things and with attempts to
preserve them as they are. So too, we can make sense of the possibility of a
practice being somewhat different than it in fact is—its having embodied
somewhat different norms—primarily because we can make sense of the
authors of such practices as having made different creative choices in doing
so or of different changes having been wrought along the way. They are, in
the sense I intended, real things, caught up with us in history with a life story
of their own. Where they exist, they exist in and through the historically
situated agents whose actions they guide and explain.
Further development of this idea must be left for another occasion. What
is important here is its connection to our methodological reflections.
We are contemplating a view on which pragmatic considerations are not
just a mandatory way of getting onto whatever works of art are, but turn out
to already concern the very fabric of those works themselves. Conceived
as miniature, individual practices, repeatable works of art are, in a straight-
forward sense, the product of our wider practices, the traditions in which
artists are working. A fuller investigation of the nature of such individual
practices must involve reflection on the kinds of judgments and their
underlying form that make up such things, through which they are created,
manifested in performance, and, for lack of a better word, lived. I hope here
to have taken a small, further step toward an understanding of works of art as
historical individuals while clearing way some methodological worries
about how we find our way to such a proposal.
References
Alward, Peter (2004) ‘The Spoken Work’ The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism
62(4): 331–7
Boyd, Richard (1999) ‘Homeostasis, Species, and Higher Taxa’ in Species: New
Interdisciplinary Essays, by Robert A. Wilson (ed) (Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press), pp. 141–85
Cameron, Ross (2008) ‘There Are No Things That Are Musical Works’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 48(3): 295–314
Caplan, Ben and Matheson, Carl (2006) ‘Defending Musical Perdurantism’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 46(1): 59–69
MUST ONTOLOGICAL PRAGMATISM BE SELF-DEFEATING? 47
Thomasson, Amie L. (2006) ‘Debates about the Ontology of Art: What Are We
Doing Here?’ Philosophy Compass 1: 245–55
Wollheim, Richard (1980) Art and Its Objects, 2nd edn (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press)
Wolterstorff, Nicholas (1980) Works and Worlds of Art (Oxford: Clarendon Press)
2
Indication, Abstraction,
and Individuation*
JERROLD LEVINSON
I.
Roughly thirty years ago, as part of an exploration of the ontology of
art, I suggested that musical works were not pure abstract structures, like
geometrical forms, but rather, impure indicated structures.1 But what exactly
does that mean? In this chapter, I propose to revisit that old idea of mine in
the hope of clarifying it, before then using it as a springboard for discussion
of artistic indication as a singular psychological act, of the individuation
of indicated objects that results from such indication, and finally, of the
relation between artistic indication and neighboring sorts of action, what we
might call actions of simple indication.
It is necessary, before we start, to briefly explain why it is that musical
works—and by the same token, literary works—cannot be considered to be
pure tonal or verbal structures. For instance, why it is that Shelley’s famous
poem Ozymandias cannot be reduced to the sequence of words: ‘I’ ‘met’
‘a’ ‘traveler’ ‘from’ ‘an’ ‘antique’ ‘land’ . . . , and why it is that Chopin’s
Mazurka in A minor Op. 17, no. 4 cannot be reduced to a complex
sequence of notes starting with an altered F major triad. Here are the most
important reasons why such works cannot be reduced to pure structures.
First, pure structures of elements, which are similar to mathematical objects,
* This chapter originally appeared in ‘Rethinking Creativity. Between Art and Philosophy,’ special
issue of Tropos: Rivista di ermeneutica e critica filosofica, edited by Alessandro Bertinetto Alberto Martinengo,
2011, 4(2): 121–33.
1 Levinson (1980). But see also Levinson (1990b).
50 JERROLD LEVINSON
cannot be created, since they exist at all times, but works of art, and that
includes musical and literary works, surely are created, by specific artists
working in definite historical contexts.2 Second, works of art have a number
of important aesthetic and artistic properties that they could not have were
they pure structures existing atemporally, with no essential links to creative
artists, preceding artworks, preceding artistic movements, and more generally,
surrounding cultural environments.
All this was shown, quite conclusively I think, in Jorge Luis Borges’ brilliant
short story ‘Pierre Menard, author of the Quixote’ and, in the philosophy of art,
through a number of important writings by Gregory Currie, Arthur Danto,
Ernst Gombrich, Jacques Morizot, Kendall Walton, and Richard Wollheim,
to cite but a few authors.3 A musical or literary work, though it is partly
defined by its tonal or verbal structure, is nonetheless, like a pictorial or
sculptural work, a particular human creation; it came into being at a certain
time; it may be destroyed in the future if the conditions for its existence cease
to obtain; and it gets its meaning and produces its effects on us not simply in
virtue of its abstract perceptible form, but in virtue of its status as a statement,
expression, or utterance arising in or emerging from a singular generative context.
A Beethoven sonata would not say the same things, musically speaking, if we
thought it to be a work by Brahms, a Jane Austen novel would not communi-
cate the same message if we considered it to be a heavily ironic Woody Allen
production, and an expressionistic painting by the young Mondrian would
certainly look much different if we saw it as a work painted sixty years later by
a mature Jackson Pollock.
This is roughly why musical and literary works cannot be pure or eternal
structures, but must rather be considered instead as impure, historically
conditioned, temporally anchored, structures. I suggested that such works
are really what I call indicated structures, which are partly abstract sorts of
objects, the result of the interaction between a person and an entirely
abstract structure, such as a sequence or series of words or notes.
The interaction in question is precisely an act of indicating, and it is this
action that creates the link between the abstract structure and the concrete
2 More cautiously, if such structures are not eternal they at least exist as soon as a musical system or
linguistic system is in place, and thus well before the works composed employing elements of such a
system.
3 See Currie (1989); Danto (1981); Gombrich (1963); Morizot (1999); Walton (1970); Wollheim
(1968).
INDICATION, ABSTRACTION, AND INDIVIDUATION 51
4 I here leave aside, as regards standard musical works, that such a work arguably has as its core not
simply a tonal structure, but rather, a tonal-instrumental structure. I do so because my concern in this
chapter is narrowly the role of indication, in the sense I try to elucidate, in the generation of certain sorts
of artworks, and not the debate between sonicists and instrumentalists as to whether performing means
are essential to standard musical works.
5 A similar complication might also be observed in the case of standard literary works, whether poems
or novels. Their core structure is not simply a verbal one, if that be understood as merely a sequence of
words or sentences, but such a sequence partitioned into lines, stanzas, paragraphs, chapters, and the like.
Such a core structure might perhaps be labeled a verbal-segmental structure.
52 JERROLD LEVINSON
6 The qualification ‘merely in virtue of my act of indication’ is important, since an act of ordinary
indication can clearly bring another event into existence in a straightforwardly causal way. For instance,
my indicating something of interest to my companion can bring about the event of her being aware of
the thing in question.
INDICATION, ABSTRACTION, AND INDIVIDUATION 53
no desire to leave any traces, however small, on the sands of time. At any
rate, such unconcern about what might follow or issue from my act of
indication is characteristic of indication in the ordinary, non-artistic sense.
Something quite different goes on in artistic indication. What is Chopin
doing, by contrast, when he composes the short but magnificent and heart-
rending Mazurka in A minor? There is a sense in which he too—using
his fingers, whether he inks the notes or plays them on the piano—is
engaged in indication. And what he indicates, in a particular order,
are certain individuals of the tonal realm that existed before the act
of composition. In this case, there is indeed an act, or rather many acts, of
simple indication by which Chopin draws our attention ultimately to a
certain tonal configuration that was there before, hidden in the tonal
domain as a field of possible sounds. But Chopin does more than that
when he is composing, because his intention is indeed to leave a mark
of some sort on the world, to insert something new into the musical culture
that precedes and surrounds him.
So what exactly does Chopin do above and beyond simple indication
when he creates his Mazurka? We can start by noticing that he chooses or
selects notes—here including pitches, rhythms, timbres, and dynamics, and
from both vertical and horizontal perspectives—he doesn’t merely draw
attention to them. That is to say, Chopin has a certain attitude—in part
approval, in part appropriation—toward those particular notes. He doesn’t
in effect merely say: ‘here are some sounds’ but rather, ‘here are some
sounds, they are now specifically mine, I embrace them, and in this exact
sequence.’ When we simply indicate, say by physically pointing or by
referring in conversation, we do not take that perspective with regard to
the object targeted; we don’t choose it, we don’t select it, we don’t
designate it as something that henceforth has an enduring relation
to ourselves.
But in creating his Mazurka Chopin doesn’t just choose or select
a sequence of notes, which he thus puts in a special relationship with
himself. If he were simply improvising, that might suffice as a description
of his activity.7 However, as a composer of a work for performance, or
7 Though it might not. Musical improvisation of some sorts can involve indication as selection, the
difference being that in the improvisational case the musician’s actions of selection have rather broad
targets, such as a given standard or a given style of playing, rather than narrow ones, such as a tonal
structure defined in detail.
54 JERROLD LEVINSON
now take note of a difficulty concerning the type status of such entities. Is an
indicated structure, that is, a structural-type-as-indicated-in-a-context, itself
strictly speaking a type? Well, odd as it may seem, perhaps not, and for the
following reason. If, as many philosophers maintain, types are wholly
defined in terms of essential properties, ones that must be possessed by any
token of the type, and if, in addition, such properties, even when relational,
are held to be eternal, and so not subject to creation, then types will also be
eternal, and equally not subject to creation.9 But that is precisely the
opposite of what indicated structures and initiated types are supposed
to be, and so insisting that they are types would undermine one of the
main motivations for introducing them. Thus, perhaps the act of artistic
indication that operates on a preexisting structural type and yields an
indicated structure or initiated type should not be conceived as having, as
output, a type tout court.
But if initiated types are not, sensu strictu, types after all, then what are
they? One possibility would be to assimilate them to qua objects, items such
as Obama-as-President, or Venus-as-seen-from-Earth.10 However, that is
not a happy suggestion, for at least two reasons. First, is that it would render
initiated types too insubstantial, too aspectual, and thus poor candidates
for creation in a robust sense. Second, is that the qua object model seems
inadequate to capture the intuition that in creating a musical work of the
standard sort one is constituting it from or making it out of some preexistent
sound structure.11 Be that as it may, if initiated types are then neither
types as classically defined, nor qua objects, they are nonetheless recognizably
what Wollheim called generic entities, that is, things that can have instances
and that can be exemplified in a concrete manner. In the case of musical
9 An argument of this sort has been offered in Dodd (2000, 2002). For discussion and partial defusing
of the argument, see Howell (2002). What I call indicated types Howell there calls types-in-use, and the
reservations aired here as to whether indicated types are finally properly thought of as types would apply
equally well to Howell’s types-in-use.
10 A theory of qua objects is worked out in detail in Fine (1982).
11 This is convincingly argued in Evnine (2009). Evnine also articulates an attractive positive
conception of what the work of making a musical work involves, a conception not far removed from
that of artistic indication as elaborated in the present chapter: ‘The labour, in the case of composition, is
not transformative of the sound structure out of which the work is made. But in some looser sense it is
work on that sound structure. It is the work of locating it within the saturated sound space and
distinguishing it from other sound structures’ (Evnine 2009, p. 215).
INDICATION, ABSTRACTION, AND INDIVIDUATION 57
II.
In the rest of this chapter I address three further questions, ones concerning
the sorts of indication effected by works of art, as opposed to the sort of
indication with which we have so far been concerned, the sort that operates
to create works of art, at least in certain art forms.
First question: How does a work indicate that it is a work of art, and is thus
to be appreciated as such? A brief answer is this. On the view of arthood that
I have proposed and defended over the years, a work of art is such—that is,
is a work of art—because it, or the object or event or structure it contains,
has been projected by an artist with a specific intention, that of making it the
case that the work be taken or treated, or regarded, or engaged with more or
less as some works of art have been taken or treated, or regarded, or engaged
12 One difficulty, though, surely remains, namely, saying what it is to instantiate the historical-cultural
aspect of an indicated type. The instantiation of the structural aspect—the sound/performance means
structure or performance type at the core of the indicated type—by a concrete performance is a familiar
and relatively unproblematic idea, but instantiation of the other aspect is arguably not. Perhaps all one
can say is that to produce a performance that complies with the structural aspect of a musical work in a
way that is mindful of and conformant with the historical-cultural aspect is thus to instantiate that aspect as
well.
13 Stecker (2009, p. 385). One might still insist that a reasonable methodological concern remains,
namely this: That the extent to which the kind of entity one posits resists being classified according to the
standard metaphysical taxonomy is the extent to which the kind of entity posited can seem sui generis or
ad hoc. But in response to that I would point out that it would be surprising if new metaphysical insights
or proposals did not often require such posits.
For a judicious review of the pros and cons of conceiving musical works as types of some sort, see
Davies (2011), ch. 2.
58 JERROLD LEVINSON
with in the past.14 It follows immediately that anything can be, or at least can
become, a work of art, if it is simply sincerely and seriously projected in such
a manner, and thus that there are no foolproof external signs that something
presented for our consideration is a work of art.
That said, some features serve as reliable, if not infallible, signs that what
we are presented with is a work of art. For instance, and confining ourselves
here for simplicity to the visual arts, features such as extraordinary beauty,
striking form, enigmatic appearance, ostensible reference to earlier art-
works; employment of a traditional artistic medium, a tag or label attaching
to the object, an autograph or signature on the object itself, or finally,
location in an art gallery or exhibition space. In many instances, these are
some of the ways that a visual artwork indicates or signals to us that it
is indeed a work of art.
Second question: What does a work of art indicate in the world beyond it?
A brief answer is that it indicates as much as can be indicated by any other
symbolic vehicle and, in some respects, rather more. Works of art can
indicate worldly objects in many ways: by representing them; by expressing
them; by exemplifying them; by evoking them; by alluding to them; by
serving as metaphors for them, and so on. Works of art sometimes go
beyond these general ways of referring in ways that are more evaluatively
loaded, as with homage, pastiche, parody, satire, burlesque, or caricature.
Of course, the question of what exactly works of art indicate about the
world outside them, in how many registers or modes, and with what import
for their overall meaning, cannot adequately be answered short of a study in
effect summarizing the whole of art criticism and meta-criticism.
Third question: What things do works of art enable us to glimpse or
discern without explicitly indicating them? In other words, what do artworks
indicate indirectly, without being meant to, without expressly drawing our
attention to them, and so to speak, in spite of themselves? A brief answer is
that they so indicate many things, and possibly more than they directly
indicate. In some sense, artworks indicate indirectly whatever one can
reasonably conjecture, given the work and the artistic context in which it
was created, about the creator and the process of creation. That is to say,
works generally reveal or betray, without aiming to do so, a range of things
about their creators and the processes by which they were created.
For instance, the way in which a novel was written can tell us much about
the neuroses of its author even if the novel doesn’t depict a neurotic narrator
and doesn’t directly address neurosis. Something of that sort might be true
of Kafka’s The Trial. A symphony, merely by being excessively long, can
convey the difficulty faced by the composer when trying to finish
the composition, even if the symphony does not directly exemplify this
difficulty. Bruckner’s Fifth Symphony is perhaps an example of such a
work. The violence of a painting’s facture and the savage character of its
forms can suggest a feeling of self-loathing that the artist himself might not
be aware of, without the painting actually expressing, representing, or
symbolizing that feeling. I am thinking here of some of Williem’s De
Kooning’s paintings from his Woman series.
In short, works of art do not only indicate what their creators meant to
convey or communicate, and which in successful cases we understand above
all in engaging with them; they can also indicate much about those creators
and their creative processes that was never meant to be conveyed or
communicated.15
If we label the sort of indication I have been concerned with in this
section work indication, the question can be raised of how work indication
relates to the sort of indication of principal concern in this chapter, namely,
artistic indication, that involved in the creation of literary and musical works
of art. We might ask, in particular, if work indication is figurative indication,
while artistic indication is literal indication. I think not. My view is that
both are literal, though of course there are salient differences between them.
First, their agents are different, artists in the one case, and artworks in
the other case. Second, the agency involved is different, being immediate
in one case, and mediated in the other. That is to say, the author or
composer directly performs actions that constitute the selectings, fixings,
and ordainings identified earlier as central to literary and musical art making,
the artist’s agency not being dependent on that of other agents, whereas
their artworks perform (or ‘perform’) actions only in virtue of having been
constituted as artifacts of a certain sort by their creators. Finally, the action
involved in work indication, if not quite figurative, is admittedly action in a
weaker sense than that involved in artistic indication, one that does not imply
15 For related reflections on what artworks indicate directly and indirectly, see Levinson (1996b).
60 JERROLD LEVINSON
References
Currie, Gregory (1989) An Ontology of Art (London: Macmillan)
Danto, Arthur (1981) The Transfiguration of the Commonplace (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press)
Davies, David (2011) Philosophy of the Performing Arts (Oxford: Blackwell)
Dodd, Julian (2000) ‘Musical Works As Eternal Types’ British Journal of Aesthetics
40: 424–40
——(2002) ‘Defending Musical Platonism’ British Journal of Aesthetics 42: 380–402
Evnine, Simon (2009) ‘Constitution and Qua Objects in the Ontology of Music’
British Journal of Aesthetics 49: 203–17
Fine, Kit (1982) ‘Acts, Events, and Things’ in Sprache und Ontologie (Vienna:
Holder-Pichler-Tempsky)
Gombrich, Ernst (1963) Meditations on a Hobby Horse (London: Phaidon Press)
Howell, Robert (2002) ‘Types, Indicated and Initiated’ British Journal of Aesthetics
42: 105–27
Levinson, Jerrold (1980) ‘What a Musical Work Is’ Journal of Philosophy 77: 5–28
——(1990a) Music, Art, and Metaphysics (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press)
——(1990b) ‘What a Musical Work Is, Again’ in Levinson (1990a)
——(1996a) The Pleasures of Aesthetics (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press)
——(1996b) ‘Messages in Art’ in Levinson (1996a)
16 It is in that respect similar to the sort of action invoked when speaking of the gravitational action of
one mass on another or of sulfuric acid on susceptible metals.
INDICATION, ABSTRACTION, AND INDIVIDUATION 61
MARCUS ROSSBERG*
I. Introduction
Since the work of Nelson Goodman (1968) and Richard Wollheim (1968)
it should be clear that not all works of art belong to the same ontological
category. Marble sculptures are unique concrete objects, while works
of literature can exist in many copies and symphonies can be performed
over and over again. Ontological questions are thus considered to be tied
to an art form, rather than to art in general. Works of art that are unique, like
marble sculptures, are plausibly taken to be concrete objects. On the other
hand, it seems that works of other art forms—in particular, arguably repeat-
able works like perhaps poems, novels, string quartets, or symphonies—
cannot be construed in this way. The repeatability of such works suggests
that they are universals rather than particulars, so the argument goes, and thus
perhaps they should be construed to be some kind of abstract object. No less
plausible is the suspicion that artworks are created by artists, and that what is
created can be destroyed. The creatability of a work of art is often held to be a
non-negotiable feature of any successful account of artworks (see e.g. Levin-
son 1980). But the contingency immanent in the creatability and destructibil-
ity of artworks seems to be at odds with the atemporal and necessary character
usually attributed to abstract objects.
This chapter investigates the question whether the following two
claims are consistent: (i) that artworks can be abstract objects; and (ii) that
* I am indebted to Matt Clemens, Daniel Cohnitz, Roy Cook, Brandon Cooke, Charlotte Geniez,
Michael Lynch, and in particular Christy Mag Uidhir for helpful comments and discussions.
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 63
all art is created and can be destroyed. To this end, we investigate two ‘case
studies’—music and computer art—to try and determine whether abstract
ontologies are plausible for either and what such ontologies would be like.
In particular, we investigate what kind of abstract object artworks might be.
We then turn to the possibility of the destruction of artworks that are
construed as abstracta of the identified kinds. The outcome of our discussion
will be that (i) and (ii) are inconsistent, given only general methodological
assumptions.
One might wonder whether a discussion of any length is required at all:
How could abstract objects possibly be destroyed? Abstract objects
are usually thought to be non-causal, but ‘destruction’ seems to indicate
causality. The inconsistency of (i) and (ii) would hence be a special case of
the general principle that abstractness and destructibility are mutually ex-
clusive. Not so; certain kinds of abstract objects arguably come into being at
a certain point in time. By a prima facie plausible symmetry, we would
expect them also to be able to go out of existence at a certain later point.
Consider, for instance, abstracta of impeccable mathematical pedigree: sets.
Sets are tied ontologically to their members. So-called impure sets are sets
that have objects as members (or members of members, and so on) that are
not sets. Such members could be abstracta that are not sets or they could be
concrete objects. What is of interest for our discussion are those impure sets
that have concreta in their so-called transitive closure (members, or
members of members, or . . . ), so let it henceforth be understood that the
relevant ‘impurities’ are concreta. Since sets are ontologically tied to their
members, impure sets may come into existence when their members do,
and they may likewise perish together. The (impure) singleton set of Igor
Stravinsky thus arguably went out of existence with Stravinsky’s death in
1971; if this is so, then maybe Johann Nelböck destroyed Moritz Schlick’s
singleton set on June 22, 1936, by shooting Schlick in the chest.
Types too have been considered to be creatable abstracta. If it seems
implausible to think that there is a fixed collection of atemporally existing
types to choose from, then perhaps a type is created together with its first
token. If types are thus created, maybe they can also be destroyed in
a fashion that mirrors their creation. One might think it odd that the type
‘A’ should continue to exist after, say, our sun has blown up and consumed
the Earth (assuming humans or ‘A’ tokens will not travel to different solar
systems). A type perhaps may perish with its last token.
64 MARCUS ROSSBERG
II. Music
For well-known reasons, chiefly the repeatability of the works mentioned
in the beginning, various kinds of universals have been suggested as an
ontology for music. Abstract, platonic universals might fit the bill: The
possibility to instantiate works of music at different times and places can be
accounted for in this way (Dodd 2000, 2002; Kivy 1983, 1987, 1988). Such
universals are traditionally conceived of as atemporal, or at best eternal, and
hence they are not good candidates for an ontology that allows for the
creation and destruction of a work (Levinson 1980). Composers, it is
sometimes argued in response, discover works and bring them to our
attention rather than create them (Wolterstorff 1975 and 1980, Section 2.
VI), pointing out that discovery can be as difficult and commendable as
creation: Think of Alexander Fleming’s discovery of penicillin or Kurt
Gödel’s discovery of the incompleteness of arithmetic (Kivy 1983,
pp. 112–13; compare Currie 1989, ch. 3; Davis 2003, pp. 31–2 (without
endorsement)). Others are dissatisfied with the prospect that pieces of music
could thus only be found and forgotten, but not created and destroyed.
Indeed, Jerrold Levinson argues that creatability is a requirement on an
adequate account of musical works (Levinson 1980, p. 9).
To overcome this problem, is has been attempted to employ an aristo-
telian1 conception of universals instead. Universals are here taken to be
ontologically dependent on their instances; they are where and when their
instances are. For the case of music, the relevant instances would presum-
ably be performances. Stephen Davies suggests this conception, holding that
1 It is customary to distinguish ‘Platonic’ (pertaining to Plato) from the non-capitalized ‘platonic’ (for
some position broadly inspired by themes of Platonic philosophy). I follow this convention also for
‘aristotelian.’
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 65
such musical universals come into existence with their first instance and
cease to exist with their last (Davis 2003, p. 32). This conception is
tempting, but one might wonder how the survival of the works between
performances is accounted for, or whether we can still hold that Beetho-
ven’s Ninth Symphony came into being when Beethoven composed it,
rather than with its first performance. Works that are never performed pose
an additional problem: They appear to await creation in some kind of
eternal limbo. Maybe these problems can be overcome, possibly by
allowing scores and the like as instances of the work. More important for
our context is that this conception of universals might as well go the whole
hog and side with those who argue that universals are concrete rather than
abstract (cf. Armstrong 1978, 1989); musical works would be nothing over
and above all of their (concrete) performances. Thus construed, the proposal
falls outside the scope of our investigation.
Advocates of platonic universals for the ontology of music often specify
them to be kinds, in particular, norm kinds (Davies 2003, Section 2; Dodd
2000; Wolterstorff 1975, 1980). The distinction between properties and
kinds may be useful in general and instructive for the case of music, but
the fine details are tangential to the discussion here: Whatever features
are peculiar to kinds, an investigation of their fundamental ontology as
abstract universals will suffice for our purpose. Let us thus neglect the
finer distinction.
Another specific proposal for suitably abstract universals is to construe
works of music as structures (Kivy 1988; Levinson 1980). Structures are
well-respected entities in mathematics and prominent items in the philoso-
phy of mathematics (see e.g. Shapiro 2000). For the case of music, sonic
structures are invoked, which are instantiated when a work is performed.2
Structures are usually taken to be necessary, atemporal, abstract universals,
which again means that all a composer can do is draw attention to specific
independently existing sonic structures. Invoking patterns as contingent
counterparts of structures seems little promising; creatable patterns are
arguably concrete, and thus offer no significant advantage over adopting
an ontology of performances without the detour. Employing that what is
2 There are differences in the accounts proposed by musical structuralists regarding, for instance, the
question to what extent such structures determine performances, in particular, regarding timbre and
the instrumentation of the work. Again, for the basic ontological question these details can and will be
omitted.
66 MARCUS ROSSBERG
display on a screen. Scott Snibbe’s Boundary Functions (1998, cf. Lopes 2009,
p. 25), for instance, consists of a platform that its users4 are to step on, a
camera and projector overhead pointing down to the platform, and a
(hidden) computer that operates the camera and projector. If two or more
people—registered by the computer by means of the camera—step on the
platform, lines will be projected onto the platform, so that each user is
enclosed by a boundary. The lines move and change according to the
movements of the users so that users cannot step outside of their boundary
lines—unless they leave the platform. For simplicity’s sake, we will here
neglect ontologically complex works like Boundary Functions. The issue of
an ontology of abstracta is likely to be obscured rather than furthered by the
discussion of works that essentially incorporate concrete items. We will thus
focus on works of what might be called ‘pure computer art,’ ‘software art,’
or ‘internet art’ to further our discussion. It should be straightforward to
adapt our findings for ontologically more complicated works. We will
simply stick to the label ‘computer art’ in what follows: while the works
we focus on are indeed typically accessible via the internet, this seems
inessential to the art form; ‘pure’ has a misleading evaluative ring; ‘software
art’ just is not entrenched in the literature.
Typical works of this species of computer art that we consider here are,
for instance, Angelo Plessas’s Towers and Powers (2009, <http://www.
towersandpowers.com>) or Damian Lopes’s Project X (1997, cf. Lopes
2009, p. 22). Towers and Powers present several squares with different
patterns and a circle with a spiral pattern on a black background. The
objects can be moved around, using a mouse or similar input device and
will interact when they touch each other; items are displaced, and will ‘fall’
as if governed by gravity. The circle will start spinning if it is held by the
mouse pointer. The pattern of the squares are black and white, but will
change to color when they are touched by the circle and usually, but not
always, change back to black and white when the contact to the circle is lost.
Lopes’s Project X is ‘a poetry-multimedia installation exploring discovery,
technology, colonialism through Vasco da Gama’s first voyage from Portu-
gal to Africa and South America’ (<http://projectx.damianlopes.com>).
4 I will follow Lopes’s convention (Lopes 2009, p. 76) to speak of the users of a work of computer art,
alluding to computer users, but also to emphasize the interactive character of works of computer art, to
which we will come shortly.
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 69
The work displays a text in which each word is hyperlinked. Each click on a
word will take the user to a different screen, either displaying verse or
entries in the ship log, or they may call on a picture or encyclopedia-style
definition, which is displayed besides the text. The resulting new screen is in
some way connected to the word that was clicked on and will in some way
describe part of da Gama’s journey: It may elaborate on the previous theme,
but it may also show things in a different light. Each use of the work has a
random starting point. The journey that users take from there is determined
by what words they click on. Through the wealth of material that is linked,
each use of the work is very likely to be in a unique series.
Works like these can be used on different computers and at different
times; the work is multiply instantiated. Moreover, works of computer
art are essentially interactive (we will not count digital pictures on their
own as computer art in this sense). The input of the user, in whichever way
it may proceed, determines what the particular instance of the work is like,
much like players of a game (be it chess or World of Warcraft) determine by
their actions what the particular playing of the game will be like. The
instances of the works obviously are in some way created by computer
programs and the inputs that the user makes and that are processed by the
program. As Lopes (2009, pp. 63–4) points out, however, it will not do
to identify the work with its program. Two programs that produce the
same result could be written in two different programming languages.
Furthermore, the language that the program is actually written in will be
either compiled, or run on a so-called interpreter, in order to translate the
relatively readable (C++, HTML, Perl, etc.) code to the proverbial zeros
and ones a computer handles. Moreover, since everything is just zeros
and ones in a computer,5 deviant processing of code may display the code
for a sound as a picture, the code for a picture as a long string of text
characters, or play text as a sound (although, to make some of these actually
work will involve some competent hacking). The layers of complexity do
not stop there, however. In order to produce the same result, the codes that
result after compiling or interpreting will be vastly different depending on
the operating system the computer uses (Linux, Mac OS, Windows, etc.)
and this will cause vastly different states of electrical potential in the network
5 This, of course, is not strictly speaking true; even the zeros and ones are mere representations of
different voltage levels in the transistor circuits.
70 MARCUS ROSSBERG
usually are similar to this: ‘Algorithms are simply . . . step by step instruc-
tions, to be carried out quite mechanically, so as to achieve some desired
result’ (Chabert and Weeks 1999, p. 1). There are even quasi-definitions like
this fairly typical one: A procedure is algorithmic, if and only if, ‘at each
step it is clear what we have to do, and it can be done “mechanically”
by finite manipulations’ (van Dalen 2001, p. 246). Standard textbooks
(e.g. Cutland 1980, ch. 1) identify algorithms with effective procedures,
mechanical methods, or set of rules to compute a function.6 So, algorithms
are certain kinds of procedures, and Lopes’s proposal is thus to specify
procedures as (part of) the ontology of computer artworks. A proced-
ure—according to textbook definitions again—is a specific prescription
for carrying out a task or solving a problem: it is a bunch of rules. Rules
or instructions do not appear to be the right ontological category for
artworks. Pretending for a moment we have even the slightest idea what
the ontology of rules might be, it just seems wrong, or even incompre-
hensible, to describe, say, Plessas’s Towers and Powers as a rule, akin to
modus ponens, or to an instruction, such as, ‘Pick up the red ball.’
Nonetheless, there is something undeniably right about Lopes’s observa-
tion that algorithms are of importance for computer art. I want to suggest,
however, they are only indirectly connected to the ontology. As mentioned
above, Lopes emphasizes the significance of the prescribed displays of
a work of computer art: The abstract algorithm alone might not do.
6 The problem that there is no proper, universally agree upon definition of an algorithm is not usually
discussed in the literature on computer art. An algorithm is meant to be an effective procedure for the
calculation of a function, but the boundaries of effective calculability elude definition. According to the
so-called Church-Turing Thesis (Church 1936 Turing 1936), effective calculability is identified with what
can be calculated by a Turing machine. (See Blass and Gurevich 2003 on the question whether it is
indeed true that Church and Turing were aiming for the same notion, as it is usually assumed.) Despite
the fact that a wide range of computability notions—including what can be calculated with an abacus—
have been shown to be equivalent to Turing computability, there is no strict proof that there are no
effective methods of calculation that go beyond what a Turing machine can calculate. There are two
lines of response to this possible problem; we can leave it to the mathematicians to eventually figure out
exactly what an algorithm is—whatever the outcome, this is the ontological category of computer art; or
one could observe that whether or not the Church-Turing Thesis is true, our computers are, in fact,
Turing machines, and given that this sufficient condition is fulfilled, every work of computer art is in fact
algorithmic.
As a final note on the technicalities: Since the process of a work of computer art depends on non-
predetermined inputs of the user, the works cannot be pure Turing machines. This poses no problem,
however. A device (in this case: the user) that supplies inputs while the program is running is standardly
called an ‘oracle’ by computer scientists. The theory of Turing machines with oracles is well studied and
does not present any theoretical difficulties (cf. Cutland 1980, Section 9.4, or any other standard
textbook on computability).
72 MARCUS ROSSBERG
7 A further complication here may be that, for any algorithm, there are always several (indeed,
infinitely many) functionally indistinguishable different algorithms. For computer artworks that might
mean: Different algorithms that determinately generate the same series of displays given the same inputs
by the user. We cannot go into this problem here, but appealing to equivalence classes again might be a
promising route.
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 73
sure that the program runs without ‘bugs’ is to try and run it—repeatedly.
However, it is entirely possible that two works are written and would run
‘bug-free’ but are actually never executed. The relevant equivalence classes
of both works would be empty, and thus the works would be identical.
Appealing to possible instances would, in addition to encountering
the ontological problems of bare possibilia, render the work indestructible.
We will thus forego such attempts.
A solution would be to argue for an alternative option, namely to
identify the work with the equivalence class of triples consisting of
computer programs implementing the algorithm, the suitable interpret-
ing/compiling/operating system, and a suitable computer architecture.
This could include programs written in different programming languages
(together with different ‘home environments’). A computer program
itself is repeatable, of course; it can run on different computers and at
different times. In order not to jeopardize destructibility, we can follow
our now familiar method and opt for the plausible account of programs (and
operating systems) as equivalence classes of inscriptions. The inscriptions
will typically not be ink on paper but electronic and on some computer
storage device such as a hard drive, memory card, or old-school floppy
disk. Either way, such inscriptions will be concrete, physical objects. Let
us now, with a number of different plausible options for abstract ontologies
for artworks, turn to their destruction.
IV. Destruction
It is clear that if artworks are construed as necessary, atemporal,
abstract universals, be they platonic universals or abstract structures akin to
mathematical structures, then they cannot be destroyed—this is pretty much
true by definition. Stravinsky’s 1919 Firebird Suite would have existed even
if Stravinsky had never lived. What about the alternatives?
Levinson advocates an ontology of structures for music, but, as
mentioned above, insists that the creatability of a musical work is a
necessary requirement for an adequate account of music (Levinson 1980,
p. 9). He argues that these structures are initiated types, as he calls them.
They have a beginning in time, when the work is composed, and
are ‘contextually qualified, person-and-time-tethered’ abstract objects
74 MARCUS ROSSBERG
8 How this could actually be worked out for e.g. musical performances is a non-trivial matter;
performances are events, and it seems that, in particular, a past event cannot strictly speaking be
destroyed. Presentists might hold that a particular event ceases to be as soon as no part of it is still
present—in our case, arguably, when the last note of a musical performance has faded. Perhaps musical
works, if identified with equivalence classes of performances, should be considered to perish as creatable
types do: When there are and can be no more performances.
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 77
9 The theory of abstract artifacts was first devised as an account of fictional characters (Thomasson
1999), but Thomasson more recently adopted it to provide answers to questions regarding the ontology
of artworks (Thomasson 2004, 2005, 2006; in fact the idea was already floated in Thomasson 1999).
10 But see Chapter 1 and Chapter 8 in this volume.
78 MARCUS ROSSBERG
11 This point has been pressed by Christy Mag Uidhir (this volume, Introduction).
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 79
V. Conclusion
The candidates for abstracta that might serve as an ontology of art which we
identified are: platonic universals; structures; classes; types; and perhaps
abstract artifacts. Leaving aside the general question whether any of these
are too suspect a kind of purported entity to employ, the following are our
verdicts for each of the five candidates. (i) Platonic universals, preexisting
and eternal, can neither be created nor destroyed, but only discovered
and forgotten. (ii) The most tempting account of pure abstract structures
groups these with the former, and hence they are also indestructible.
(iii) Classes—more precisely: equivalence classes of concreta—can be
construed as coming into and going out of existence with their members.
Thus, we can arguably destroy a class by destroying its members. This very
nature, however, is precisely what makes classes dispensable: It seems that
any ontology of art that can be formulated in recourse to destructible
equivalence classes can be formulated without appeal to classes. (iv) Types
suffer a similar fate: Whether or not they are identified with equivalence
classes of their tokens, they appear ontologically superfluous if construed in
a destructible way. (v) Abstract artifacts appear to face a fate similar to that
of types—if construed as universals—or unable to solve the problems that
abstracta were brought in to address in the first place—if construed
as particulars.
Generalizing from our findings, the conclusion appears to be that there is
no room for an abstract ontology of art that accounts for the creatability and
destructibility of artworks. The more plausible the proposals become,
the more they emphasize qualities usually attributed to concreta, rather
than abstracta. Genuine abstracta appear to be pushed so far to the fringe
in this type of account that they do not play any significant role. This is what
makes abstracta theoretically superfluous in these proposals. An ontology
that employs abstracta that are not eliminable in the ways suggested above
would have to include features that are of ontological importance or make
sense of phenomena pertaining to artworks that cannot be explained by
the substituted concrete ontology. In other words: The features that block
DESTROYING ARTWORKS 81
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DESTROYING ARTWORKS 83
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II
Informative Comparisons
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4
Art, Open-Endedness, and
Indefinite Extensibility
ROY T. COOK
I. Introduction
It is widely (although by no means universally) accepted that there can never
be a set of necessary and sufficient conditions specifying exactly which
objects are, or can be, works of art. This idea—that art is, in some sense,
open-ended—is not new. On the contrary, many influential philosophical
accounts of the nature of art, including the views sketched in Danto (1964),
Gaut (2000), Levinson (1979), and Weitz (1956), can plausibly be thought to
entail some version of this thesis. The purpose of this chapter is first, to
become a bit clearer about what this open-endedness amounts to and
second, to examine the connections, or lack thereof, between the sort of
open-endedness found in art and another kind of open-endedness: The
indefinite extensibility often thought to be characteristic of certain prob-
lematic areas of mathematics, such as set theory, the theory of ordinal
numbers, and the theory of (transfinite) cardinal numbers.
We shall carry out this examination in three distinct stages. First, in
Section II, we shall examine some extant accounts of the nature of art,
focusing on the arguments for open-endedness that these accounts entail, in
order to clarify exactly what the open-endedness of art amounts to. Next, in
Section III, we shall compare the open-endedness of art to another philo-
sophically important and widely discussed sort of open-endedness: The
indefinite extensibility of mathematical concepts such as set, ordinal, and
cardinal. The main focus naturally will be determining whether the class of
artworks (or of possible artworks) is indefinitely extensible in the same sense
88 ROY T. COOK
decision on our part to extend the use of the concept to cover this, or to close the
concept and invent a new one to deal with the new case . . . (1956, p. 31)
A few things are worth noting from the outset. First, a concept is open-
ended if and only if there is always a possible situation for which our
previous commitments and decisions are insufficient to mandate2 a decision
vis-à-vis that concept in the novel possible situation. Second, although
Weitz speaks here of an ‘imagined or secured’ situation or case, it is clear
from the context that he does not mean for the open-endedness of a concept
to be hostage to our imaginative abilities. On the contrary, it seems clear
that Weitz would count a concept as open-ended if there were always a
possible situation that required a decision on our part, even if the limitations
of our imaginative capacities prevent us, in some cases, from recognizing
these possibilities. Note that we can recognize that in every case there is a
possibility of the relevant sort without being able to recognize the relevant
possibility itself in every case.
Weitz goes on to argue that the concept art is open-ended in this sense,
on roughly Wittgensteinian grounds:
The problem of the nature of art is like that of the nature of games, at least in these
respects: If we actually look and see what it is that we call ‘art’, we will also find no
common properties—only strands of similarities. Knowing what art is is not
apprehending some manifest or latent essence but being able to recognize, describe,
and explain those things we call art in virtue of these similarities. (1956, p. 31)
2 There are two ways of understanding the failure of mandate in Weitz’s novel possible situation:
(a) Neither application of ‘art’ nor application of ‘non-art’ is mandated, so either judgment (but
presumably not both at once) are permissible.
(b) Neither application of ‘art’ nor application of ‘non-art’ is mandated, so neither judgment is
permissible.
It seems clear from the text, and from his importation of the Wittgensteinian framework, that Weitz has
something like (a) in mind, however.
90 ROY T. COOK
or the other. As a result, for Weitz the extension of the predicate ‘is art’ has
vague or indeterminate boundaries in exactly the sense suggested by Witt-
genstein’s (1953) analysis of the concept game.
It will be useful to nail down the general structure of this argument a bit
more carefully. Arguments for the open-endedness of art, including Weitz’
argument as sketched above, typically proceed in three stages. First, an
argument is given for the open-endedness of the concept in question,
typically stemming from some particular account of the nature of the
concept itself. Second, the open-endedness of the concept art is then
taken to entail that there can be no explicit, non-question-begging defini-
tion of this concept—that is, there is no finite set of individually necessary
and jointly sufficient conditions for an object to be a work of art. Third, the
open-endedness, and undefinability, of the concept art is taken to imply
that the extension of the predicate ‘is art’ is hazy, fuzzy, vague, indetermi-
nate, indefinite, or otherwise imprecise.
These last two steps are often run together (both in the literature on
aesthetics, and in literature on open-endedness more generally). However,
there are good reasons for keeping the thesis about the undefinability of the
concept art distinct from the thesis about the indeterminacy or indefinite-
ness of the extension of the predicate ‘is art.’ The fact that set theory
contains transfinitely many completely determinate, yet undefinable, sets
already suggests that the latter conclusion does not follow from the former.
And it turns out that the open-endedness of art only supports, at best, the
former conclusion.
As already suggested above, the open-endedness of art amounts roughly
to the lack of any finite set of individually necessary and jointly sufficient
conditions for an object to be a work of art. In fleshing this out more fully,
there are two approaches that suggest themselves. The first is to concentrate
on the idea that any sufficient condition for being a work of art fails to be
necessary. The second is to concentrate on the contrapositive of the first—
that any necessary condition for being a work of art fails to be sufficient. For
the sake of convenience we shall focus on the former approach, since this
formulation will facilitate our comparison with indefinite extensibility
below. Thus, we begin with the thought that the open-endedness of art
amounts to the in-principle failure of any sufficient condition for being a
work of art also being a necessary condition.
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 91
3 Note that this is much weaker, and more plausible, than the claim that the class of possible artworks
is finite.
92 ROY T. COOK
4 Alternatively, we could have retained the formulation of the original open-endedness schema and
reinterpreted the quantifiers as ranging over possible or future as well as actual objects. The formulation
given above better accords with standard logical practice, however.
5 L.E.J. Brouwer believed that mathematical objects were actual mental constructions, and as a result,
the only mathematical objects that existed at a particular time were those that had been explicitly
constructed. See Brouwer (1949).
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 93
6 Weitz’s view actually seems to support a stronger thesis: That there are no non-trivial necessary
conditions for being a work of art at all. That is, given any description not containing occurrences of
the predicate ‘Art’:
(9y)( ~ (y)) ! ◊(9y)(~ (y) ^ Art(y))
94 ROY T. COOK
these things be artworks without the theories and the histories of the Artworld.
(1964, p. 584)
Note that opposites, for Danto, need not be either exclusive or exhaustive
in general—they need only be exclusive and exhaustive with respect to the
class of works of art created as of time t. As a result, on Danto’s view, there
could be an artistic breakthrough where an artist decides that property H is
henceforth artistically relevant, and that his works shall have (and be
understood in terms of ) property H, but where no works of art prior to
this decision have H. The artist in question could then produce works that
have property H but which lack all of the opposites relevant to art prior to
this imagined artistic breakthrough. Note that this process requires not only
the artist’s introduction of works that have property H, but also requires the
audience and artworld’s acceptance of H as artistically relevant.
If we make the further assumption that any significant necessary condi-
tion for an object being a work of art will be formulated in terms of the
properties defining various artistic styles, then Danto’s account of artistic
progress entails something much like the Modal Open-Endedness Thesis:
Given any sufficient condition formulated in terms of the ‘opposites’
relevant to the concept Art at time t, there will be a possible work of
art—the result of an artistic breakthrough of the sort described above—that
will fail to have this condition (and further, it will be a work of art, in part, in
terms of its making a new pair of opposites salient for evaluating and
categorizing art).
While Danto’s account of artistic breakthrough does entail something like
the open-endedness of art, on closer examination it appears that something
fishy is going on here. Unlike Weitz, Danto does believe that there is a
relatively simple necessary and sufficient condition for being a work of art:
An object is a work of art for Danto if and only if it expresses some sort of
content about a subject in such a way as to require a certain sort of audience
participation, where that participation requires, in turn, specialized art-
historical knowledge or context (Danto 1964). Note, however, that this
condition is not a condition holding merely of the object in question; rather,
it is a relational condition expressing the existence of complex interactions
between artist, artwork, audience, and (most notoriously) the artworld.
As a result, we need to further restrict the conditions that can be
legitimately plugged into our Open-Endedness Schema if we wish to
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 95
claim that Danto’s view entails the open-endedness of art in any substantial,
interesting sense. On Danto’s view, there is no substantial, non-trivial
necessary condition for being a work of art that can be expressed solely in
terms of properties of the object and that does not involve intentional states
of the audience, artist, or artworld. Note that the non-relational properties
of a purported object, understood in this way, need not be identical to the
aesthetically relevant ‘opposite’ pairs discussed above—on the contrary,
many pairs of ‘opposites’ relevant to the categorization of, and appreciation
of, art will involve properties tied up with the intentional states of artists,
audience, and others—that is, they will be relational in the relevant sense.
Nevertheless, any non-relational property could be introduced as one ele-
ment in a pair of relevant ‘opposites,’ and this is enough to carry out a
version of the argument above for the open-endedness of art. Thus, Danto’s
view involves something like the:
Weak Modal Non-Relational Open-Endedness Schema:7
Given any non-relational predicate8 not containing occurrences of ‘is art’:
(8y)((y) ! Art(y)) ! ◊(9y)(~ (y) ^ Art(y))
There is one final observation that needs to be made regarding Danto’s
characterization of the open-endedness of art in terms of opposite pairs.
Unlike Weitz’s view, which merely implies that there is no description that
precisely and determinately distinguishes the class of (possible and actual)
works of art from the class of (possible and actual) non-artworks, Danto’s
view implies a substantial further claim: That any object whatsoever—or at
least any object that we can name, describe, or otherwise pick out
uniquely—could, in the right circumstances, be a work of art. After all,
there seem to be no a priori constraints on the sort of properties and
that can serve as the basis of an opposite pair (other than that such
properties must be contradictories relative to an appropriate sortal). As a
result, any object can be made a work of art, so long as the object is
accompanied by an artistic breakthrough of the sort described above—one
7 There is, of course, an analogous strong version resulting from prefixing a necessity operator.
8 Of course, a full explication of Danto’s view would require us to determine in some detail exactly
what does, and does not, count as a relational predicate. This problem has vexed philosophers as far back
as Leibniz, but since all we need for present purposes is the claim that Danto accepts some substantial
version of the Open-Endedness Schema, we need not enter into these difficult matters here.
96 ROY T. COOK
that introduces at least one new opposite pair in virtue of which the new
artwork (and, as a result, all old artwork) is evaluated.9
This conclusion should not be taken to imply that random objects can
become works of art willy-nilly. After all, we cannot make a urinal a work
of art merely by stipulating that it is a work of art. On Danto’s account,
however, we can make (and Duchamp has made) a urinal a work of art by
specifying (at least implicitly) the relevant properties that are relevant to our
appraisal of the urinal as an artwork (in other word, by specifying the newly
relevant opposite pair or pairs). We should not be fooled by this into
thinking that such artistic breakthroughs are trivial or easy, however, since
on Danto’s view the successful introduction of a novel pair of opposites
requires (eventual) acquiescence on the part of audience and artworld.
Nevertheless, it seems plausible that, on Danto’s account, any object what-
soever can be a work of art so long as (i) it can be introduced along with a
relevant opposite pair (or pairs); and (ii) the artistic relevance of these pairs is
(or at least could be) accepted as artistically relevant by the audience and
artworld.
Other popular accounts of the nature of art support some version of the
open-endedness thesis. For example, cluster accounts such as those explored
in Gaut (2000), where an object is a work of art if, loosely speaking, it has
‘enough’ of the properties from some relevant list supports a version of the
Weak Modal Non-Relational Open-Endedness Schema (and possibly the
earlier, non-relational version, depending on the exact details of the list).
Likewise, on Levinson’s (1979) historical definition of art, any object
whatsoever can presumably be art so long as the artist has proprietary rights
to the object and has the right intentions towards the object, and this again
entails something much like the Modal Non-Relational Open-Endedness
Schema. Thus, many, if not most, views on the nature of art entail some sort
of open-endedness, and as a result it is worth examining more closely the
consequences that do, and do not, follow from the Modal Non-Relational
Open-Endedness Schema. In particular, we shall examine two claims
that might be taken to follow from the open-endedness of art (i) that the
open-endedness/indefinite extensibility of art entails that there can be no
definition of the concept art; and (ii) the open-endedness/indefinite
9 Arguably, Danto’s After the End of Art (1998) can be read, at least in part, as pushing this line of
reasoning in its most extreme form.
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 97
The idea that at least some mathematical concepts—in particular, the ones
leading to the Russell, Cantor, and Burali-Forti paradoxes—are open-
ended in a sense at least similar to the sense in which Weitz believes that
10 One might wonder, of course, whether the concepts set, ordinal number, and cardinal number
as grasped by 19th century mathematicians mobilizing the (inconsistent) naı̈ve versions of these notions
are the same concepts as those grasped by 20th and 21st century mathematicians (and whether pre-
paradox mathematicians working with the naı̈ve version of these notions were grasping a genuine
concept at all). For our purposes, however, we need only note that the paradoxes generated by the naı̈ve
conceptions of these notions led to a new (and, one hopes, consistent) understanding of these concepts as
indefinitely extensible.
11 To be absolutely fair, Weitz only says that closed concepts only occur within mathematics and logic,
and not that all mathematical and logical concepts are closed. It is hard not to read the latter claim into his
comment about mathematical concepts being ‘constructed and completely defined’ however.
98 ROY T. COOK
Loosely speaking, self-reproductive classes such as the class of sets, the class of
cardinal numbers, and the class of ordinal numbers, cannot be collected
together (despite the somewhat disingenuous use of the term ‘class,’ which
explains our intuitions to the contrary). Any attempt to do so allows us to
identify additional members of the class that are not contained in the collec-
tion. The paradoxes, on Russell’s view, are thus the result of attempting to
collect together all objects falling into a class that cannot be so collected.
Michael Dummett provides a clearer formulation of this idea, and he also
introduces the now standard terminology ‘indefinite extensibility’:
The paradoxes—both the set theoretic and the semantic paradoxes—result from
our possessing indefinitely extensible concepts . . . An indefinitely extensible con-
cept is one for which, together with some determinate range or ranges of objects
falling under it, we are given an intuitive principle whereby, if we have a suffi-
ciently definite grasp of any one such range of objects, we can form, in terms of it, a
conception of a more inclusive such range . . . By the nature of the case, we can
form no clear conception of the extension of an indefinitely extensible concept; any
attempt to do so is liable to lead us into contradiction. (1993, p. 454)
For our purposes, we can understand the term ‘definite collection’ to be co-
extensive with set.12 The idea that paradox-prone mathematical concepts
such as set, cardinal number, and ordinal number are indefinitely exten-
sible is now a widely accepted part of the mathematical folklore13 (although
there is more disagreement regarding what consequences follow from this
claim and what measures should be taken to insure that indefinitely exten-
sible concepts do not give rise to paradoxes—see Shapiro and Wright 2006
for a more detailed discussion). In addition, I have argued elsewhere that the
concept semantic status (or, a bit more loosely, the concept truth value)
is indefinitely extensible (see Cook 2008, 2009b). Our purpose here is to
determine whether there open-endedness of the concept art can be viewed
along the same lines.
Recall that one of the reasons for interest in the open-endedness of the
concept art is the thought that this open-endedness might entail (i) that
there can be no precise definition of art; and (ii) that the extension of the
predicate ‘is art’ is vague, imprecise, or indeterminate. Thus, if the concept
art turns out to be indefinitely extensible in the same sense as the concepts
set, ordinal number, and cardinal number, then this would provide
substantial evidence for the claim that the concept is indefinable and that
its extension is indeterminate (or, at least, there would be as much reason to
think so as there is reason to think that the mathematical concepts in
question are indefinable, and that their extensions are indeterminate).
There are three (somewhat interconnected) reasons for thinking that the
concept art is not indefinitely extensible in the same sense as are the
concepts set, cardinal number, and ordinal number, however.
First, there is the simple fact that there do not seem to be enough works
of art, or even enough possible works of art. One paradigmatic feature of
indefinitely extensible concepts such as set is that the indefinite nature of
sets entails that the sets form a proper class. In other words, loosely speaking,
there are more sets than can be ‘fit’ into a single set, and this continues to
12 This move would, of course, be viciously circular if our main goal was to gain a deeper understand-
ing of the indefinite extensibility of the concept set. Since our goal is merely to compare and contrast the
indefinite extensibility of set (and related notions) to the open-endedness of the concept art, however,
the assumption is harmless.
13 For example, given any set of sets X, the power-set of the transitive closure of X is not in X, and
given any set of ordinals numbers Y, the ordinal number corresponding to the order type of all ordinals
less than or equal to some ordinal in Y (on the standard ordering) is not in Y.
100 ROY T. COOK
hold no matter how we strengthen our set theory and no matter how large
the sets are that we eventually accept into our domain.14 The collection of
possible works of art is, however, almost certainly set-sized: Presumably the
identity conditions for works of art are determined by some combination of
physical characteristics of the work (or an instance of, token of, or template
for it), its connections (physical, cultural, historical, etc.) to other relevant
objects, and the psychological states of relevant agents. While the class of
works of art that can be obtained by varying one or more of these factors is
no doubt massive, it is still much smaller than the first inaccessible cardinal
number (the size of the smallest standard model of ZFC set theory).
It might appear as if we have pulled a fast one at this point, however.
After all, didn’t we just argue in the previous section that, at least on some
conceptions of the open-endedness of art (such as Danto’s), any object can
be a work of art? If so, then if sets are objects and any set can be a work of
art, then the class of possible works of art contains all sets, and is thus at least
as ‘large’ as the proper class of all sets! Recall, however, that the claim made
in the discussion of Danto’s opposite pairs account was more carefully
worded than this. What was argued for is the claim that any object that
we can name or uniquely describe can be a work of art. This does entail that
many abstract objects, including infinitely many sets, can be works of art, but
so long as our language is countable (or even uncountable but set-sized),
there will be many more sets that we cannot so name or uniquely describe,
and these cannot be art.15 In other words, if a is a set that is neither nameable
nor uniquely describable in our (set-sized) language of set theory, then not
even a latter-day mathematical Duchamp can bring it about that a is a work
of art. Thus, the class of possible works of art remains too small, in the
relevant sense, to be indefinitely extensible in the same sense as are sets,
ordinal numbers, and cardinal numbers.
14 This objection depends on accepting something akin to either the iterative conception of set or the
limitation-of-size conception of set as the underlying rationale for the set theory we adopt (which will as
a result be something along the lines of first- or second-order ZFC, depending on one’s views on logic).
For those readers who prefer some other conception of set (and as a result adopt an axiomatization of set
theory substantially different that ZFC), the second and third reasons for thinking that the concept art is
not indefinitely extensible in this sense will, it is hoped, suffice.
15 Of course, we are being somewhat generous here. There remains the rather interesting, but likely
quite difficult, task of specifying in detail exactly how—even on Danto’s account—one might go about
making it the case that the empty set (or any pure set) is a work of art.
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 101
16 The following is a simple model showing the deductive consistency of the Strong Modal Open-
Endedness Schema. Let our language be the language of Peano Arithmetic supplemented with a
necessity operator and a primitive non-logical predicate ‘Art.’ Then:
M ¼ <W; R; I>
W ¼ fwn : n [ øg
R ¼ f<wn ; wm > : n mg
Each world a standard model of arithmetic where:
IðArt; wn Þ ¼ fm : m ng
Needless to say, this model is not meant to provide any insight into the actual ‘behavior’ of the concept
art, but merely to provide a formal proof of the consistency of the schema in question.
102 ROY T. COOK
of concepts such as set, cardinal number, and ordinal number that, when
left untreated, lead to paradox. There are no pre-theoretic paradoxes
involving the concept art that the indefinite extensibility account might
help us to understand however, so there seems to be little reason to think
that the concept art is indefinitely extensible in this sense. To put things
bluntly, if the concept art doesn’t have the symptoms, then there seems
little reason to apply the diagnosis.
Thus, the (relatively speaking) limited number of possible works of art,
our apparent ability to quantify over all possible works of art, and the lack of
any pre-theoretic paradoxes associated with the concept art all tell against
the conclusion that this concept is indefinitely extensible in a manner similar
to the indefinite extensibility of cardinal number, ordinal number,
and set.
Dummett’s idea here is simple: Unlike the case with set and similar set-
theoretic notions, it is not the class of natural numbers itself (i.e. the class of
objects) that is indefinitely extensible. Instead, it is the class of truths about
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 103
natural numbers that is indefinitely extensible. I shall call this notion Gödelian
indefinite extensibility (for reasons that shall soon become obvious). We can
formalize this alternative understanding of indefinite extensibility as follows:
the weaker, Gödelian sense: The only difference between the indefinite
extensibility of the concept arithmetic truth and the indefinite extensi-
bility of the concept art is that, given a particular sufficient condition for
arithmetic truth, a truth not falling under this condition can be found.
Given a sufficient condition for art, however, a work not meeting this
condition might need to be created (hence the possibility diamond in the
formulation for art). Unlike the indefinite extensibility of concepts like set,
however, this sense of indefinite extensibility does not entail anything about
the size or paradoxicality of the class of instances of the concept in question,
nor anything about our ability to quantify over all of them at once.
Now that we have a better grasp of the connections between the open-
endedness of art and indefinite extensibility, it is time to examine what
conclusions we can draw. As already noted, the two conclusions at issue are
(i) that the open-endedness/indefinite extensibility of art entails that there
can be no definition of the concept art; and (ii) the open-endedness/
indefinite extensibility of art (perhaps combined with the indefinability of
the concept art) entails that the extension of the predicate ‘is art’ is hazy,
vague, indefinite, or indeterminate.
We can handle the first of these simply and decisively. As we have already
seen, the open-endedness, and hence the indefinite extensibility, of the
concept art is consistent with explicit, precise definitions of art such as
Danto’s definition or Levinson’s definition—at least, this is the case if we
understand the open-endedness along the lines of the Modal Non-
Relational Open-Endedness Schema. Thus, the Gödelian indefinite exten-
sibility of the concept art does not by itself entail that a precise set of
necessary and sufficient conditions for being an instance of ‘is art’ is impos-
sible. What is entailed, however, by the open-endedness and indefinite
extensibility of art as understood above is the non-existence of a definition
of the concept art that can be formulated purely in non-relational terms. As
a result, any adequate definition of art must include relational notions (such
as those included in both Danto’s and Levinson’s accounts).
Of course, it is plausible that the stronger version of the thesis lacking the
restriction to non-relational predicates—that is, the version of the Modal
Open-Endedness Schema attributed to Weitz above—is incompatible with
the existence of any precise definition of art. Of course, this is in one sense
unsurprising, since one of Weitz’s explicit goals is to argue against any such
definition (following Wittgenstein). The critical point for our purpose,
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 105
however, is this: There are substantial and highly non-trivial versions of the
thesis that the concept art is open-ended that are compatible with the
existence of a precise definition of the concept art.
The second issue—whether the extension of the predicate ‘is art’ is hazy,
vague, or indefinite, is of more interest. Dummett himself argues that the
correct logic for reasoning about indefinitely extensible concepts of both
the original and the Gödelian variety, such as set and truth of arithmetic,
is intuitionistic logic (see e.g. Dummett 1963, 1993). If this were right, then
it would provide good reasons for thinking that the extension of the
concept art (like the extensions of set and truth of arithmetic, on this
account) is indeterminate. After all, the rejection of bivalence on the part of
intuitionistic logicians can be fruitfully understood as the rejection of a
sharp, determinate boundary separating the truths (and hence, in this
particular case, true predications of ‘is art’) from falsehoods (see e.g. Tennant
1996). Thus, if the logic for reasoning about art, and, in particular, for
reasoning about the applicability conditions for the predicate ‘is art’ were
intuitionistic, then this would provide good reasons for thinking that the
extension of the predicate is indeterminate, and indeterminate in a particu-
larly well-understood way.
There is a general consensus that Dummett is wrong about the logic of
indefinitely extensible concepts, however. Even if intuitionistic logic is
attractive for other reasons,19 and even if intuitionistic logic should as a
result be applied when reasoning about any concepts, including indefinitely
extensible concepts, the indefinite extensibility of these concepts does not,
on its own, provide an argument for the correctness of intuitionistic logic.
The paradoxes and puzzles that plague indefinitely extensible concepts such
as set and truth of arithmetic are not blocked merely by adopting
intuitionstic logic and rejecting bivalence (see Williamson 1998 for useful
discussion). Thus, the indefinite extensibility of the concept art gives us no
more reason to accept that the extension of ‘is art’ is vague or indeterminate
than the indefinite extensibility of truth of arithmetic gives us any reason
to think that there is no sharp distinction between those statements of
arithmetic true on the standard model and those statements that are false
on the standard model.
V. Conclusion
As we have seen, if the concept art is open-ended, then it is open-ended in
a sense similar to the (Gödelian) indefinitely extensibility of the concept
natural number. This open-endedness, while of immense philosophical
interest, entails neither the undefinability of the concept art nor the inde-
terminacy or indefiniteness of the extension of the predicate ‘is art.’ Instead,
the openness of art is not a metaphysical thesis regarding any indeterminate-
ness in the class of works of art, but instead reflects an epistemological
limitation, our in-principle inability to precisely (non-relationally) specify
exactly which objects are, will be, or can be works of art. These conclusions,
hopefully, provide some novel insights into the nature of both individual
works of art and the concept art. Perhaps more importantly, however,
the arguments and issues examined above provide a starting point for
more substantial interaction and collaboration between two areas of
ART, OPEN-ENDEDNESS, AND INDEFINITE EXTENSIBILITY 107
References
Brouwer, L.E.J. (1949) ‘Consciousness, Philosophy, and Mathematics’ in Proceed-
ings of the 10th International Congress of Philosophy, Amsterdam 1948 3: 1235–49
Cook, Roy T. (2008) ‘Embracing Revenge: On the Indefinite Extensibility of
Language’ in J.C. Beall (ed) Revenge of the Liar: New Essays on the Paradox
(Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 31–52
——(2009a) ‘New Waves on an Old Beach: Fregean Philosophy of Mathematics
Today’ in Oystein Linnebo and Otavio Bueno (eds) New Waves in Philosophy of
Mathematics (Aldershot: Ashgate), pp. 13–34
——(2009b) ‘What is a Truth Value, and How Many Are There?’ Studia Logica 92:
183–201
——(forthcoming) In D. Cohnitz, P. Pagin, and M. Rossberg, Erkenntnis (Special
Issue): Monism, Pluralism, Relativism: New Essays on the Status of Logic
Danto, Arthur (1964) ‘The Artworld’ Journal of Philosophy 61: 571–84
——(1998) After the End of Art (Princeton: Princeton University Press)
Dummett, Michael (1963) ‘The Philosophical Significance of Gödel’s Theorem’
Ratio 5: 140–55
——(1993) The Seas of Language (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Gaut, Berys (2000) ‘Art as a Cluster Concept’ Theories of Art Today. Edited by Noel
Carroll (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press: 25–44)
Levinson, Jerrold (1979) ‘Defining Art Historically’ British Journal of Aesthetics 19:
232–50
Russell, Bertrand (1906/1973) ‘On Some Difficulties in the Theory of Transfinite
Numbers and Order Types’ in Bertrand Russell, Essays in Analysis (New York:
Braziller), pp. 135–64
Shapiro, Stewart and Wright, Crispin (2006) ‘All Things Indefinitely Extensible’ in
Agustin Rayo and Gabriel Uzquiano (eds) Absolute Generality (Oxford: Oxford
University Press), pp. 255–304
Tennant, Neil (1996) ‘The Law of Excluded Middle is Synthetic A Priori, if Valid’
Philosophical Topics 24: 205–29
Weitz, Morris (1956) ‘The Role of Theory in Aesthetic’ Journal of Aesthetics and Art
Criticism 15: 27–35
Williamson, Timothy (1998) ‘Indefinite Extensibility’ Grazer Philosophische Studien
55: 1–24
Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1953) Philosophical Investigations (London: Blackwell)
5
Historical Individuals Like Anas
platyrhynchos and ‘Classical Gas’
P.D. MAGNUS
than resolve the disagreement. No, I argue, because even for the pluralist a
core disagreement remains; just whether the view of musical works as
historical individuals is even minimally sensible. In Section IV, I review
the notion of species-as-individuals. Although this general idea is the majority
view in biology, there is no consensus about the precise metaphysics of
historical individuals. Nevertheless, it gives us a sketch that we can deploy to
give Rohrbaugh’s suggestion some ontological sophistication. Once we
have done so, it becomes clear that Dodd’s arguments against musical
works as individuals simply miss the mark. In Section V, I conclude with
a discussion of the homeostatic-property-cluster (HPC) conception
of species. An HPC is a regularity in the co-occurrence of properties,
maintained by an underlying causal nexus. Although it is often taken to
be an alternative to the view that species are individuals, it is better to think
of individuals as a variety of HPC. With this in mind, I suggest that we can
think of musical works as HPCs.
proposal is that repeatable works like books and songs are abstract artifacts—
a suggestion which traditional metaphysics would treat as a category
mistake. Thomasson’s work thus exemplifies a reactionary approach.
The labels ‘revisionist’ and ‘reactionary’ distinguish the two approaches
with respect to how they treat art practice. From the direction of how they
treat traditional metaphysics, Thomasson is the one advocating revolution.
So I do not intend the labels as praise for one side or the other. Rather, it
would be an unhappy end if we had to pick between these two options.
Andrew Kania (2008) offers a way to reconcile the two: If the reactionary
ontology fits what we say and do, then that is our picture of art. A practice-
first analysis would thus be in the business of unpacking our assumptions,
not of showing that they are tenable or true. It would be descriptive
metaphysics, in the fashion of Strawson (1959). The revisionist explications
would, in contrast, describe what there actually is in the world. This
broaches fictionalism, according to which ‘art’ talk is merely as if there
were artworks. Although fictionalism is one way out of the staring contest
between revisionists and reactionaries, it should not be our first resort for
resolving the dispute. We should only think that ‘art’ is a fiction of practice
if it really is impossible to resolve the tension between art and sensible
metaphysics. If there is a way to make sense of art which both respects
practice and could possibly be true, then fictionalism would be otiose.
In this chapter, I will just be considering musical works. If works of
art have a common ontology, then my conclusions will generalize. If they
do not, then my conclusions might still apply to other repeatable works
like books and movies. Regardless, such extensions are beyond the scope of
this chapter.
The philosophical debate about the ontology of music is often framed as
being about pure music, also called abstract or absolute music. A work of pure
music does not include semantic content (e.g. lyrics) or performative
elements (e.g. gesticulation). This restriction comports with one standard
view about music: Sonicism, according to which a musical work simply is a
sound structure. Because refusing the restriction to pure music would
beg the question against sonicism, I accept the restriction for the sake
of argument.
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 111
1 The Story of Classical Gas, <http://www.classicalgas.com/gasstory.html> (last accessed May 31, 2011).
112 P.D. MAGNUS
to fixate’ (2003, p. 188). Indeed, for music, fixation on the score is a red
herring. If the musical work is an abstract type of sound structure, then the
same musical work would exist even if the score for it had never been
written down.
Consider ‘Classical Gas’ again. There is an online video of Sungha Jung
playing an arrangement by Ulli Bögershausen. One commenter on YouTube
says of the Jung video that they do not really like this arrangement. Another
describes Jung’s performance as a really nice rendition. The thing to note is
that both commenters take it to be an arrangement and a rendition of
‘Classical Gas,’ not some separate work. With multiple editions by a single
composer, one might imagine that the composer’s authorial power connects
revised scores to earlier ones. The historical separation here is a step further,
because Bögershausen rather than Williams’ did the arranging. And even
the original recording of the work was itself arranged by someone other
than the composer. Nevertheless, it is natural to say that Williams playing
Post’s arrangement was a performance of the same ‘Classical Gas’ that was
performed when Jung played Bögershausen’s arrangement. This means that
Bögerhausen’s arrangement extends the range of things that can count as
performances of ‘Classical Gas.’ In jargon, the work is temporally flexible.
Third, works are temporal, meaning that they come into existence when
composed and could go out of existence. There was no ‘Classical Gas’ in the
Jurassic period, in the Renaissance, or during the Second World War. It
simply did not exist until Mason Williams invented it. If Williams were
annihilated along with all of the recordings, sheet music, guitars, and
guitarists, then there would be no more ‘Classical Gas’—it would be
gone. Note that the claim of temporality is not that the musical work only
exists when actually being played or performed. ‘Classical Gas’ does not
snuff out of existence when guitarists go to sleep and return to existence
when the first note is strummed again.2 Rather, it continues to exist because
it is part of the available guitar repertoire. It is maintained by guitarists,
recordings, and all the rest.
These features are incompatible with the view that musical works are
abstract sound structures. Instead, Rohrbaugh suggests that we should think
2 ‘Classical Gas’ has been played on radio and television literally millions of times, perhaps more than
any other musical work. So it is possible that it has been continuously occurring somewhere for most of its
history. This, of course, is beside the point.
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 113
odd, after all, if art had a sui generis ontology. Call this the argument from
bizarro ontology.
Dodd also objects that he cannot make sense of how a musical work qua
historical individual could be repeatable.3 Since an individual does not have
instances, the separate performances cannot instantiate the piece. As an
historical individual, the musical work has embodiments—the things in the
world, which either constitute it or upon which it ontologically depends.
Yet, Dodd asks, how can embodiments count as occurrences of the work? As
he notes, there are many kinds of ontological dependence which do not
amount to occurrence. For example, the impure set {Mason Williams}
ontologically depends on Mason Williams. Although Williams meets the
conditions for being the embodiment of the set, he is certainly not an
occurrence of the set. Call this the argument from repeatability.
Dodd offers some further objections that only apply to specific develop-
ments of Rohrbaugh’s proposal. For example, historical individuals may be
understood as four-dimensional objects extended through time. On this
view, the individual is identical to an historical process. Dodd objects to
this in two ways.
First, it is natural to say that someone who listens to the three minutes and
six seconds of ‘Classical Gas’ has heard the whole thing. This would not be
true if the work is a long process that stretches from the late 1960s to the far
future. He argues that ‘it is plainly intuitive to think that an audience hears
entire works in a performance’ and that the four-dimensionalist construal
cannot accommodate this (2007, p. 157). My intutions differ on this, and I am
perfectly comfortable saying that the audience hears an entire performance of
the work but does not hear the entire work simpliciter. In any case, from
Dodd’s handling of modal and temporal flexibility, it is clear that one
intuition one way or another will not settle this matter. The core of the
issue is whether Rohrbaugh’s suggestion could possibly be respectable
metaphysics.
Second, Dodd insists that the construal of works as four-dimensional
objects fails because they would be ontologically multifarious (2007,
pp. 160–2). The worry is this: A particular occurrence of the work would
be a temporal part of the overall work; e.g. the part from 8:00 p.m. to 8:03
3 Dodd says ‘continuant’ instead of ‘historical individual,’ but he is clear that he intends to mean by
the former exactly what Rohrbaugh does by the latter; see Dodd (2007), p. 144, fn. 1.
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 115
on a particular day. Yet when two guitarists play ‘Classical Gas’ at just that
time in different places, the temporal part would contain two performances.
So some occurrences would be spatially unified (when there was only
one performance of the work during that time slice) and others spatially
scattered (when there was more than one performance at that time).
Occurrences altogether would lack any sensible ontological unity. Call
this the argument from multifariousness.
Apparently, Rohrbaugh himself does not favour the four-dimensionalist
construal of his proposal.4 Rather, he prefers to think of historical individuals
as abstract objects which ontologically depend on but are not constituted
by their embodiments. A work would thus be wholly present every time
and place it is performed. It would endure, rather than perdure. Note,
however, that there is nothing in Rohrbaugh’s original argument which
necessitates this. On face, an historical individual seems to have none of the
markers of an abstract object. Abstract entities are not perceptible, do not
enter into the causal order of things, and exist outside space and time.5 In
contrast, historical individuals may be perceptible. They necessarily enter into
the causal order, coming into being and going out of being. They are spatially
and temporally local. I will not pursue this point, since most of Dodd’s
arguments do not depend on whether a musical work is a thing constituted
by its embodiments or an abstract object dependent on its embodiments.
To sum up, I have distilled Dodd’s resistance to Rohrbaugh into
arguments from bizarro ontology, repeatability, and metaphysical multifari-
ousness. At the core of these is an insistence that the ontology of musical
works as historical individuals just does not make sense.
4 Dodd says that Rohrbaugh has said as much in personal communication (2007, p. 148).
5 I take this list from from Zoltán Gendler Szabó (2003), but it is entirely typical.
116 P.D. MAGNUS
relies crucially on the way that we actually think and talk about art (2008,
p. 433). As a descriptive or anthropological account, it does not need a
‘further metaphysical defence’ (p. 434). As we saw earlier, he recommends
fictionalism—an option that we should not embrace too quickly.
In a paper coauthored with Christy Mag Uidhir, I argue for art concept
pluralism (Mag Uidhir and Magnus 2011). Our claim is that there
are multiple legitimate ways of thinking about art. Applying different art
concepts, we argue, yields different answers to questions about which
objects are occurrences of which works.6 Applying the aesthetic art concept
to music, two identical sound structures will both count as instances of the
same work. Applying the historical art concept, two sound structures must
have the same provenance in order to count as instances of the same work.7
For ordinary purposes, it is unnecessary to tease these apart. Since they will
typically yield the same judgments, there is an advantage in the looseness of
our usual talk about ‘art.’ Specifying one or the other is only required
to make sense of extraordinary cases and philosophical disputes.
Art concept pluralism explains why there are intuitions that line up on
both sides: The competing intuitions are honed by different art concepts.
We can see the different intuitions as guiding when and how each concept
is applicable.
It is tempting to say that there are simply different ontologies appropriate
to the different concepts: Musical works qua aesthetic art are types. Musical
works qua historical art are individuals. This would be too quick, however.
As Mag Uidhir and I are careful to point out, pluralism should not be used as
a universal solvent to dissolve any philosophical dispute. If Dodd is correct
that works-as-individuals is an unsatisfactory and incoherent ontology, then
it will not do even as the ontology for works qua historical art.
In order to be a non-fictionalist pluralist and insist that musical works
even as considered under specific art concepts really are historical individuals,
I must answer Dodd’s allegation that the ontology of historical individuals is
a category-violating disaster. The easiest way to do that is to show that it is
not novel—contra claims by Rohrbaugh, Dodd, and Kania. Quite the
contrary, it has been familiar to philosophers of biology for decades. It is
6 In the paper, we talk about ‘instances’ of works. I say ‘occurrence’ here in order to be neutral
between Rohrbaugh’s and Dodd’s ontological proposals.
7 The conventional art concept would also require common provenance.
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 117
now almost a consensus among biologists that biological species are histor-
ical individuals. In the next section, I explain this view and argue that
musical works would be historical individuals in much the same sense.
8 As Reydon (2003) notes, however, some authors take the species-as-individual to be merely the
sum of the organisms that exist at a particular time.
118 P.D. MAGNUS
The argument, recall, was that a three-minute temporal part of the work-
as-individual could include one performance or many; so the temporal
part might be spatially local or spatially disjoint. Apply this to a species-
as-individual. A temporal part of A. platyrhynchos typically includes
a great many organisms and is spatially disjoint. Yet we can imagine a
near-genocide, which kills all but a single duck. A temporal part after the
duckpocalypse would include just one organism and would be spatially
local. This does not show any problem with the species-as-individuals
view. Rather, it shows that a particular organism is not merely a temporal
part of a species. An organism is a spatiotemporal part. There is not one
spatially disjoint mallard alive at the present time, but instead a great many
individually local mallards.
The same answer can be given to Dodd’s argument about musical works.
An occurrence of a work, as a part of the historical individual, is not a
mere temporal part. Rather, a performance is a spatiotemporal part. When
there are two performances of ‘Classical Gas’ at the same time but in
different places, there are two occurrences of the work. The occurrences
are distinct parts of the work-as-individual, just as two ducks on a pond are
distinct parts of the species-as-individual. So much, then, for the argument
from metaphysical multifariousness.
Consider next the argument from repeatability. If a musical work were
a type, then each performance would be an instance of the type. Dodd’s
worry was that there was nothing akin to instantiation for historical individuals.
Yet species provide a model here. Each individual duck is a member of
the species. Even though it is odd to say that each performance is a ‘member’
of the work, this is just a terminological difference. The performance may
relate to the work as the duck relates to the species.
As Dodd notes, there are plenty of things that have embodiments (stuff in
the world upon which they ontologically depend) but which do not have
occurrences. Embodiments will not always count as occurrences. Mallards
are repeatable in the straightforward sense that there are a great many
of them now and that they will produce future generations that include
even more. The objection that embodiments do not always underwrite
repeatability is beside the point. Species-as-individuals provide a model of
how some embodiments can count as occurrences. Of course, not all
embodiments of a musical work will count as occurrences of the work.
A printed score for ‘Classical Gas’ is an embodiment of it and can contribute
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 119
9 Ghiselin himself sees individualism about species as ‘the inspiration for a new ontology with
profound implications for knowledge in general’ (2009, p. 253). Rohrbaugh’s treatment of musical
works as individuals would thus be a specific development in that program. Engagement with Ghiselin’s
more detailed metaphysics is beyond the scope of this chapter, since the approach is decidedly reaction-
ary (in the sense of Section I).
120 P.D. MAGNUS
structure.12 Yet the patterns of sound are not sufficient for an occurrence of
the work. Performances of the work all share a single, distal cause: The
original composition of the work. All the occurrences of the work as similar
sound structures are part of the same token causal story, just as all the mallards
as similar organisms are part of the same token history. That is to say the
musical work is an HPC unified by a token history. It is an individual.
One might object that Boyd himself thinks of species-as-HPCs but not as
individuals. The complication is that Boyd thinks that a single species might
originate multiple times in different places. However, he is not concerned
with philosophical examples like molecular duck dopplegangers in a distant
galaxy. Instead, he is concerned about species that result from hybridization
(see Boyd 1999b). Imagine that two parent species can be crossed to produce
viable offspring and that different specimens from the parent species are crossed
on several occasions. Boyd insists that the hybrids from each cross and their
offspring, although part of separate causal histories, would count as members of
the same species. So he insists that a species-as-HPC might be unified simply
by a type of unifying cause. A proper individual, in contrast, must be unified in
the broadest scope by a single token cause. If species must be individuals, then
the separate hybrid lineages—even if they were indistinguishably similar—
would be distinct species. So, because he allows the possibility of separate
hybrid origins for the same species, Boyd denies that species are individuals.
Boyd’s worries about hybrids do not obviously arise for musical works.
Imagine note-for-note identical compositions being written by two
composers. These would be separate works, at least considered under the
rubric of historical art or conventional art rather than aesthetic art. We might
instead imagine a case in which a single musician composes a tune, writes it
down, forgets about it, and later composes a note-for-note identical tune.
Structurally, this would be like the cases of repeated hybridization that
worry Boyd. The important difference is that Boyd’s case is biologically
plausible; it actually occurs among plants. The parallel case of repeated
musical composition seems more fantastic. I am unsure of what to say
about it. Suppose one said that the two tunes would be distinct works; the
two works would each be historical individuals. Suppose instead that one
12 Recorded and synthesized occurrences of the work complicate the story somewhat. Each time
a computer plays a MIDI file of ‘Classical Gas,’ there is a different kind of local cause than when there is a
live performance of it. Nevertheless, there are still local causal explanations to be given in both cases, and
the two share a distal cause (the original composition).
HISTORICAL INDIVIDUALS LIKE ANAS PLATYRHYNCHOS 123
said that the two tunes would be the same musical work; the works would
not be individuals, strictly speaking, but property complexes unified by
causal origins that were sufficiently similar. In this latter case, both causal
origins would still crucially share the same individual actor—the selfsame
composer. So even if we allow that the same work could be composed
twice in this way, it would still be an HPC, and there would be significant
constraints on what could count as a composition of the work. This odd
kind of counterexample to works-as-individuals still puts the work in
the same category (HPCs). It would provide no comfort for traditional
works-as-types approaches, such as Dodd’s Platonist sonicism.
VI. Conclusion
Rohrbaugh argues from our understanding of musical works, their flexibility
and temporality, to the conclusion that they are historical individuals. Dodd
objects that this is an unacceptable ontology. Seen as a struggle between a
revisionist (Dodd) and a reactionary (Rohrbaugh), this could only be settled at
the level of philosophical methodology. Yet Dodd’s objections fail, as the
analogy with individualism about species makes clear. The analogy does not
fully resolve things, but instead leaves us the task of elaborating what ‘histor-
ical individual’ must mean. I have argued that ‘individuals’ are best under-
stood as homeostatic-property-clusters (HPCs), which are unified by a
common history rather than merely by a type of process. So we can see
musical works, under the rubric of historical art, as HPCs.
Since HPCs are important for a general account of the world, seeing
works of music as HPCs is not a reactionary position at all. If the account fits
with art practice, then the view is not revisionary either.
References
Boyd, Richard N. (1999a) ‘Homeostasis, Species, and Higher Taxa’ in Robert
A. Wilson (ed) Species: New Interdisciplinary Essays (Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press), pp. 141–85
——(1999b) ‘Kinds, Complexity and Multiple Realization’ Philosophical Studies
95(1/2): 67–98
124 P.D. MAGNUS
* We would like to thank Alexi Burgess, Ben Caplan, Stephen Finlay, John Hawthorne, James
Higginbotham, Christy Mag Uidhir, Mark Schroeder, and Gabriel Uzquiano for very helpful comments
and discussions. Our greatest debt is to Karen Lewis, Barry Schein, and Joshua Spencer for very helpful
discussions on numerous occasions.
1 Here and throughout the chapter, when we say ‘subject’ we will be speaking of the grammatical
subject.
126 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
I. Simple Semantics
In what follows we will be interested in sentences such as (3) and (4), which
we take to fall into a single class. To understand which class of sentences this
is, consider how (3) differs from:
5. The polar bear is eating a fish.
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 127
The noun-phrase ‘the polar bear’ is used very differently in (3) and (5). In
(5), it picks out some particular, contextually salient polar bear (say, a polar
bear the speaker is watching), whereas in (3) it does not. Instead, (3) seems to
be saying something about how polar bears generally, typically, or charac-
teristically are. That is, it seems to be a kind of generic statement, relevantly
like ‘dogs bark’ and ‘ducks lay eggs’: it is a generalization about entities of a
given kind, though in order to be true the relevant property needn’t be had
by all or (in some cases) even most of the entities of that kind.2
There is a similar divide between sentences about repeatable artworks.3
Contrast (4) with:
6. The Moonlight Sonata will begin any minute now.
The noun-phrase ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ is used very differently in (4) and
(6). In (6) it picks out some particular, contextually salient performance,
whereas in (4) it does not. Instead, in (4) we seem to be making a claim
about how performances of The Moonlight Sonata generally, typically, or
characteristically are. And this claim will be true even if some, or even most,
of the performances are not roughly fifteen minutes long.
We will be interested in sentences about repeatable artworks, like (4), and
generic sentences, like (3). Sentences of both kinds are such that, though their
surface structure suggests they have subject-predicate form with the subject
referring to an individual, the subject does not seem to pick out some
particular, contextually salient manifestation or instance of the relevant re-
peatable artwork or kind. We will call these sentences the target sentences, and
we will be investigating how these sentences are to be understood.
One fairly natural view about the target sentence is this.
Simple Semantics (SS): Each of the target sentences has simple subject-
predicate form, and is true, if and only if the individual entity referred
to by the subject has the property picked out by the predicate.
Theorists who endorse Simple Semantics have two options. They can take
the predicates in the target sentences to pick out exactly the properties they
2 For an introduction to generics, see Carlson and Pelletier (1995) and Leslie (forthcoming).
3 The similarities between repeatable artwork sentences and generics has been noted elsewhere. Most
recently by Stefano Predelli (2011), but he points to discussions of this similarity by Wollheim (1968 and
1980), Wolterstorff (1975), and Levinson (1980), among others.
Q: What’s the difference between ‘Polar bears have four paws,’ and ‘The Moonlight Sonata has four
movements?’ A: The first contains a bear plural.
128 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
seem to, or they can take the predicates in question to pick out some other,
less obvious properties. That is, they must accept or reject the following.
The Straightforward Predication View (SPV): In the target sentences, the
predicate picks out the very same property that it appears to pick out.
That is, it picks out the very same property it picks out in ordinary
subject-predicate sentences where the subject refers to an ordinary
individual.
We will call the denial of the Straightforward Predication View the Obscure
Predication View (OPV). We will argue against Simple Semantics by present-
ing a dilemma. If the proponent of Simple Semantics accepts the Straight-
forward Predication View, then her view will both overgenerate and
undergenerate: It will overgenerate by predicting that there are true readings
of some target sentences that do not seem to have true readings, and it will
undergenerate by predicting that there are not true readings of some target
sentences that do have true readings. We will then show that if the propo-
nent of Simple Semantics accepts the Obscure Predication View, then
although she can avoid both of these problems, she will face a third
problem, the familiar problem of anaphoric predication.
The basic problem with the combination of Simple Semantics and the
Straightforward View is this. If we adopts such a view, then we will need to
say that there is some entity that is the referent of ‘the polar bear’ in target
sentences of the form ‘the polar bear is F’ and some entity that is the referent
of ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ in target sentences of the form ‘the Moonlight Sonata
is G,’ and so on for other target sentences. But for any entity that we may
identify as the referent of ‘the polar bear,’ it will have features that polar
bears don’t typically have, and it will lack features that polar bears do
typically have—and similarly for ‘The Moonlight Sonata.’ Consequently,
this view will predict that seemingly false target sentences are true, and
that seemingly true target sentences are false.
If SS is true, the subject of any given true target sentence refers to some
entity. Thus, in (3), there is some entity referred to by ‘the polar bear,’ and
in (4), there is some entity referred to by ‘The Moonlight Sonata.’ Suppose we
were to endorse the dominant view, on which entities like these are aspatial
and atemporal.4 We might, for instance, identify them with abstract prop-
4 The view that repeatable artworks are abstract has been defended by Currie (1989), Dodd (2004),
Kivy (1983), Levinson (1980), and Wolterstorff (1980). For a more complete list of defenses of this view,
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 129
erties. Perhaps ‘the polar bear’ refers to the property being a polar bear, and
perhaps ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ refers to the property being a Moonlight Sonata
performance. Unfortunately, this kind of view undergenerates. Consider the
following:
7. The polar bear is roughly eight feet long.
4. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
Both of these sentences have true readings. But, given our current assump-
tions, we should predict that they do not. For we are now assuming that (7)
ascribes the property of being roughly eight feet long to an aspatial entity, and,
similarly, that (4) ascribes the property of being roughly fifteen minutes long to
an atemporal entity. It is reasonable to assume, however, that only objects
present in space can have size, and only objects present in time can have
temporal duration. (Later, we will discharge this assumption.) It would
seem, therefore, that on our current suppositions, sentences (7) and (4)
should be unambiguously false. This view, therefore, undergenerates. It
also overgenerates, since this view predicts that the negations of (7) and (4)
are unambiguously true.
What if, instead, we combine SS and SPV with the view that the subjects
of our target sentences (e.g. ‘The Moonlight Sonata,’ ‘the polar bear’) refer to
entities that are present in space and time? There are then three alternatives
that are fairly natural:
(i) The referent, x, of the subject in question is some privileged individ-
ual among what we would ordinarily take to be the instances or
manifestations of x. Thus, even in sentences such as (3) and (7) in
which there is no contextually salient polar bear that we are picking
out, there is still a unique polar bear that is the referent of ‘the polar
bear.’ Similarly, in sentences such as (4), ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ refers
to some particular Moonlight Sonata performance, or to some other
particular manifestation of The Moonlight Sonata, such as particular
written score, recording, or mental tokening.5
see Caplan and Matheson (2006, p. 59). However, one may claim repeatable artworks are kinds while
claiming that they are present where their instances are: Wollheim (1980, p. 76) is an example of a
proponent of such a view. Views on which these entities are present in space and time will be discussed
shortly.
5 We wish to remain neutral on which sorts of entities count as manifestations of The Moonlight Sonata.
130 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
6 Recently, a version of this view has been proposed and defended by Caplan and Matheson (2004,
2006, and 2008).
7 This view was proposed by Tillman (2011), and further defended in Spencer and Tillman (2012).
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 131
tion of views predicts that at least one of them will lack any true readings,
this combination of views undergenerates.
One might try to avoid these consequences by claiming that which polar
bear is the referent of the subject of any given target sentence will depend on
the sentence. However, it is not clear what the grounds would be for
claiming that the subject of (8) happens to have a referent that is located
completely outside of Alaska, whereas the subject of (9) happens to have a
referent that is located completely inside Alaska. Further, they will need to
claim that in these two sentences,
10. The polar bear has four paws and is present only in Alaska.
11. The polar bear has four paws and is present only outside of Alaska.
what the referent of ‘the polar bear’ is in the first conjunct of each sentence
depends on what comes after that conjunct. But this is implausible.
Suppose instead that we endorse (ii). If we accept SS and SPV, and we
want to allow that sentences such as (7) and (4) have true readings, then this
will impose serious constraints on what sorts of things can be the referents of
the terms in question. For in this case the referent of ‘the polar bear’ in (7)
will have to be roughly eight feet long, and the referent of ‘The Moonlight
Sonata’ in (4) will have to be roughly fifteen minutes long. But according to
(ii), the referent of the subject of (7) is the size of the fusion of all polar bears,
which is much longer than eight feet. And the referent of (4) will have the
duration of the fusion of all Moonlight Sonata performances, which will be
much longer than fifteen minutes. So this view will undergenerate. It will
also overgenerate, in producing true readings of the negations of (7) and (4).8
It seems, then, that the only remaining natural alternative for the pro-
ponent of SS and SPV is to opt for (iii), and claim that the referent of ‘the
polar bear,’ and similarly the referent of ‘The Moonlight Sonata,’ is a multi-
located entity that is wholly located wherever there is a complete polar bear
8 This objection isn’t new. An objection similar to this one was presented by Dodd (2004, p. 353), and
responded to by Caplan and Matheson (2006, pp. 61–3). That discussion leads us to believe that Caplan
and Matheson would simply reject (4), and accept sentences like ‘The second half of The Moonlight Sonata
was missing from that complete performance.’ But sentences like that one seem particularly bad.
Similar worries face temporal parts theorists: e.g. we might say of a persisting point-sized object, x, ‘x
has exactly one part.’ If accept Simple Semantics, and take the referent of the subject to be x rather than,
say, its current temporal part, then we must either reject the Straightforward Predication View, reject
four-dimensionalism, or deny the truth of the sentence. It is not uncommon to think that such sentences
are, strictly speaking, false.
132 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
9 In fact, there are several problems. Here’s one: (iii) requires either claming that identity is intransitive
(because, e.g., The Polar Bear will be identical with each of several distinct polar bear manifestations), or
claiming that there’s colocation (of The Polar Bear and particular polar bears). If we posit colocation,
barring same non-standard views, we must either posit genuine, ground-level colocation, or deny the
(perhaps region-relativized) uniquencess of composition, which will also cause a grounding problem.
10 One could instead claim that whenever there is a merely partial performance of The Moonlight
Sonata, the entire Moonlight Sonata is present. However, for any merely partial performance of The
Moonlight Sonata, there is some part of The Moonlight Sonata that is unperformed. So, with respect to
where the performance is, we can truly say: ‘Part of The Moonlight Sonata is absent.’ However, on this
view, we can also truly say: ‘No part of The Moonlight Sonata is absent.’ But these two sentences cannot
even possibly both be true.
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 133
11 One could instead say that for any part of The Moonlight Sonata to be present in a performance, all of
The Sonata must be performed. But this would mean that, no matter how close to being complete a merely
partial performance of The Moonlight Sonata is, not a single part of the symphony would be present in it,
though the whole Sonata would be present in a complete performance that was ever so slightly different.
Further, anyone at a performance of The Moonlight Sonata could not know whether they were in the
presence of The Sonata until they knew whether the performance would be a complete one.
134 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
that property. So this combination of views will predict that there are no
true readings of (12), and will thereby undergenerate. (Similarly, it will
overgenerate due to predicting a true reading of the negation of (12).)
Thus, it seems that if the proponent of SS accepts SPV, then her view will
have unacceptable consequences regardless of what she takes the subjects of
the target sentences to refer to. For, regardless of what we take to be the
referent of ‘the polar bear’, or the referent of ‘The Moonlight Sonata,’ either
there will be some feature had by that referent that will, via SS and SPV,
guarantee true readings of sentences that we take to be false, or there will be
some feature that the referent lacks that will, via SS and SPV, guarantee false
readings of some sentences we take to be true. We’ve focused on just some
of these features, but there are many ways one can run an argument of this
form against the combination of SS and SPV.
There is, however, an objection to our argument that deserves some
comment. In presenting this argument, we assumed that if ‘the polar bear’
and ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ are aspatial and atemporal, then these entities do
not have the sorts of features that appear to be ascribed to them in sentences
(7) and (4). For while the sentence ‘polar bears are roughly eight feet long’ is
true, aspatial entities don’t have size. And while the sentence ‘The Moonlight
Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long’ is true, atemporal entities don’t have
duration. There are, however, some who would deny this, maintaining that
non-located entities can have such ordinary features as sizes and durations.
They could do so by appealing to the following claim, defended by David
Liebesman (2011):
Inheritance Hypothesis: Whenever k is a kind whose members generi-
cally have some property, F, k itself is F.
Suppose that the Inheritance Hypothesis is true, and suppose that ‘the polar
bear’ refers to a kind, specifically, the kind the polar bear. Suppose further that,
generically, polar bears are roughly eight feet long. In this case, it will follow
from the Inheritance Hypothesis that the kind referred to by ‘the polar bear’
is itself roughly eight feet long. Hence it will follow, from SS and SPV, that
sentence (7), ‘the polar bear is roughly eight feet long,’ is true. Similarly, if
‘The Moonlight Sonata’ refers to a kind to which all and only the Moonlight
Sonata performances belong, and if, generically, Moonlight Sonata perform-
ances are roughly fifteen minutes long, then it will follow from the Inherit-
ance Hypothesis that The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 135
Hence it will follow from SS and SPV that sentence (4), ‘The Moonlight
Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long,’ is true. These are exactly the results
we want.
Unfortunately, this explanation of the truth of (7) and (4) is unacceptable,
since it leads to paradox. To see how, let K be the kind to which all and only
performances of The Moonlight Sonata belong. Note that, necessarily, Moon-
light Sonata performances are not kinds. But if something is true necessarily
of all Moonlight Sonata performances, then (perhaps excepting any necessar-
ily finkish dispositions) it is true generically of Moonlight Sonata perfor-
mances. And so it follows that K is a kind whose members are, generically,
not kinds. Hence it follows from the Inheritance Hypothesis that K is not a
kind. And so we have deduced that the kind to which all and only
Moonlight Sonata performances belong is not a kind, which is a contradic-
tion. And so the Inheritance Hypothesis is unacceptable. We conclude,
therefore, that one cannot plausibly object to our argument via appeal to
the Inheritance Hypothesis.
One might respond by claiming that the Inheritance Hypothesis is more
general than what is needed to explain the truth of (7) and (4), and that we
should instead appeal to a restricted Inheritance Hypothesis instead. How-
ever, not only is it unclear how we can do this in a way that would avoid the
sort of worry just raised (for we can raise it with respect to other properties
such as being spatial, lacking members, etc.), but any restriction would leave us
without a unified explanation of the truth conditions of this sort of generic
sentence. The sentence ‘Moonlight Sonata performances aren’t kinds’ seems
relevantly similar to the sentence ‘Dogs bark.’ So if one is true in virtue of
the relevant kind having the predicated property (and it is generic in virtue
of it having inherited that property from its instances, which generically
have it), the other should be as well.
So far we have seen that problems result from combining SS with
SPV. Let us therefore turn to the view that results from combining SS
with OPV. That is, let us consider the view that when a predicate like ‘has
four paws’ or ‘is roughly fifteen minutes long’ occurs in a target sentences, it
can thereby pick out some property that differs from the property it would
normally pick out. If we adopt such a view, we can claim that in the
sentence
3. The polar bear has four paws.
136 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
‘has four paws’ picks out not the property having four paws but rather the
property being such that its typical instances have four paws. Similarly, one can
maintain that in
4. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
‘is roughly fifteen minutes long’ picks out the property being such that its
typical performances are roughly fifteen minutes long. By adopting such a view,
the proponent of SS could endorse (3) and (4). For she could claim that the
referent of the subject of (3) is a kind, and that this kind has the property
picked out by the predicate of (3), since it is such that its typical instances
have four paws. And she could say something similar about (4).12
Such a view, however, faces a well-known problem—the problem of
anaphoric predication. Consider the following dialogue:
3. The polar bear has four paws.
13. Yes, and so does this puppy, Chompy.
Because of the anaphoric reference in (13), it’s reasonable to assume that the
two sentences ascribe the same property to the entity referred to by their
respective subjects. But on the view we are now considering, in (3) ‘has four
paws’ picks out the property being such that its typical instances have four paws.
And so, if the two sentences ascribe the same property, then (13) must
ascribe to Chompy the property being such that his typical instances have four
paws. But Chompy, presumably, isn’t the sort of thing that has instances.
And so the view under consideration seems to predict, falsely, that (13) can’t
be true. A similar problem will arise if we claim that in (4), ‘is roughly fifteen
minutes long’ picks out the property being such that one’s performances are
typically roughly fifteen minutes long. For such a view falsely predicts that, in the
following dialogue, the second sentence cannot be true.
4. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
14. Yes, and so is the time-out I just received.
12 Wolterstorff endorses this. He follows Wollheim in claiming that, for any kind, k, and predicate,
P, if P can apply to k, and P picks out (at least in some instances of use in natural language) a property that
must be had by an entity in order for it to be an ideal member of k, then p can be truly predicated of k
(Wollheim 1968, pp. 64–5), (Wolterstorff 1975, p. 328). However, he then claims that, in many cases of
this, the kinds and their members do not share the relevant properties. He says that instead, there is
‘analogical predication’; the predicate picks out one property when applied to the member, and a distinct
property when applied to the kind. (Wolterstorff 1975, pp. 326–8)
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 137
For the time-out referred to in (14) presumably doesn’t have instances, and
so it isn’t such that its typical instances are roughly fifteen minutes long.
To recap: If the proponent of Simple Semantics adopts the Straightfor-
ward Predication View, then her view will overgenerate (predicting that
sentences have true readings when they don’t) and it will also undergenerate
(predicting that sentences don’t have true readings when they do). If, on the
other hand, she rejects the Straightforward Prediction View, then she will
face the problem of anaphoric predication just described.
On this view, in (3), ‘the polar bear’ is not a name referring to some
individual. Rather, it picks out a property, namely the property being a
polar bear, which occurs within the scope of the GEN operator. Similarly, in
(4), ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ isn’t a name referring to an individual, but rather
picks out the property being a Moonlight Sonata performance. And this
account seems to explain nicely why (3) and (4) are true: (3) is true because
polar bears typically have four paws, and (4) is true because Moonlight Sonata
performances are typically roughly fifteen minutes long.
However, not all sentences whose subject phrases are ‘the polar bear’ or
‘The Moonlight Sonata’ can be interpreted in this way. For many such
sentences do not seem to make generic claims about polar bears or perfor-
mances. Consider:
16. The polar bear is widespread.
17. The polar bear is nearly extinct.
18. The Moonlight Sonata is popular.
19. The Moonlight Sonata is two hundred years old.
Clearly (16) and (17) don’t say that, typically, individual polar bears are wide-
spread or extinct, and (18) and (19) don’t say that, typically, individual perfor-
mances of The Moonlight Sonata are popular or over two hundred years old.
In order to explain the difference between (3) and (4) on the one hand,
and (16) through (19) on the other, one might hold that ‘the polar bear’ and
‘The Moonlight Sonata’ don’t refer to individuals in (3) and (4), but that they
are names referring to individuals in (16) through (19). Thus, one might
hold that the logical forms of (16) and (17) are as follows:
16a. Widespread(The Polar Bear)
17a. Popular(The Moonlight Sonata)
However, cases involving anaphoric reference raise problems for this view.
Consider the following sentence:
20. The Moonlight Sonata is popular and is roughly fifteen minutes long.
On the view under consideration, the logical form of this sentence would
have to be as follows:
20a. Popular (The Moonlight Sonata) & GEN(x)[Is-a-Moonlight-Sonata-
performance(x), Is-roughly-15-minutes-long(x)]
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 139
But this can’t be the form of the sentence. For in (20), the reference in the
second conjunct is anaphoric on the first, and so the two conjuncts must
have some element in common. But in (20a), this is not the case.
This problem can be solved, however, via appeal to Gregory Carlson’s
theory of generic statements (applied to repeatable artwork sentences by
Stefano Predelli (2011)). Carlson (1982) posits a ‘realization’ relation holding
between the relevant manifestations and the entity being manifested.16 On
this treatment of generic sentences, (3) has the form (3b):
3. The polar bear has four paws.
3b. GEN(x)[M(The Polar Bear, x), Has-four-paws(x)]
Here, M(y, x) indicates that x is a member of y. We can thus take ‘the polar
bear’ to refer to a single entity, like a kind.
Similarly, on Predelli’s view of repeatable artwork sentences, ‘The Moon-
light Sonata’ is always a name referring to a single entity. Sometimes, as in the
standard reading of (18), this name serves as the subject of a simple subject-
predicate sentence. And in other cases, such as the standard reading of (4),
this name lies within the scope of a GEN operator. Thus, on Predelli’s view,
the logical form of (4) is (4b):
4. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
4b. GEN(x)[R(The Moonlight Sonata, x), Is-under-15-min-long(x)]
Here R(y, x) indicates that x is a performance of y. More generally,
according to Predelli, where ‘m’ is the name of a musical work, sentences
with the surface form ‘m is F’ can have readings with either of the following
two logical forms:
21. F(m)
22. GEN(x)[R(m, x), F(x)]
Similarly, for Carlson, where ‘k’ refers to some natural or artificial kind,
such as the polar bear or the Honda Fit, sentences with the surface form ‘k is F ’
can have readings with either of the following two logical forms:
16 For Carlson, this relation can be stood in by instances and the kinds they belong to, or by stages and
the individuals they belong to. The latter is helpful in capturing the meaning of ‘characterising
sentences,’ where a property is claimed to be generically had by an individual (e.g. ‘Marzette garden’).
140 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
23. F(k)
24 GEN(x)[M(k, x), F(x)]
And in the case of a mixed sentence with the surface form ‘m is F and m is
G,’ the two conjuncts may differ in their logical form: One may have a
simple subject-predicate form, while the other may involve the GEN
operator. And this, according to Predelli, will also be true in the case of
sentences like (20). According to Predelli, the standard reading of (20) has
the following logical form:
20b. Popular (The Moonlight Sonata) & GEN(x)[R(The Moonlight
Sonata, x), Is-roughly-15-min-long(x)]
On this view, we can make sense of the reference in the second conjunct
being anaphoric on the first, since the two conjuncts share a common
element, as they both refer to The Moonlight Sonata.
The Carlson/Predelli View also solves the undergeneration problem
faced by SS. Recall from the last section that, if we assume SS and SPV,
then regardless of what we take ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ to refer to, we will
predict of some sentences that they lack true readings when in fact they have
true readings. If, for example, we take ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ to refer to
some atemporal entity, then our view will predict that,
4. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long.
has no true reading, since atemporal entities don’t have durations. The
Carlson/Predelli View solves this problem, for according to Predelli’s
view, (4b) is a possible reading of (4), and on this reading, (4) is true even
if the referent of ‘The Moonlight Sonata’ is atemporal. Similarly, according to
Carlson’s view, one possible reading of (3) is (3b), and on this reading it is
true. More generally, since the Carlson/Predelli View implies that the target
sentences have readings on which they make generic claims about the
members of the kinds to which the subject refers, rather than claims about
the referent of the subject, this view implies that such sentences can be true
even when this referent lacks the property picked out by the predicate.
Unfortunately, though the Carlson/Predelli View solves the problem of
undergeneration, it doesn’t solve the problem of overgeneration. That is,
the Carlson/Predelli View, like the view that arises from combining SS with
SPV, implies that sentences have true readings when they don’t. The reason
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 141
conjuncts differ only in terms of what sort of thing they say about these
entities. On this view, the first conjunct of (20) says of Moonlight Sonata
performances that collectively they are popular, and the first conjunct of (27)
says of polar bears that collectively they are nearing extinction. By contrast, the
second conjunct of (20) says of Moonlight Sonata performances that individu-
ally they are roughly fifteen minutes long, and the second conjunct of (27) says of
polar bears that individually they live on a diet of marine animals.
An analogy may be helpful. Consider the following:
28. Outside our tent there were three lions: Leo, Lex, and Lionel. The
lions were gathered around the water hole and they had shaggy
manes.
It is very plausible that both conjuncts of (28) are simply about Leo, Lex, and
Lionel. These conjuncts differ in that while the first says something about
them collectively, the second conjunct says something about them distribu-
tively.
A view of generics along these lines has been proposed by Kathrin
Koslicki (1999), who develops an account of generics that borrows from
the view of plural quantification developed by George Boolos, James
Higginbotham, and Barry Schein. On Koslicki’s view, the logical form of
(3) can be represented as follows:
3c. Have-four-paws((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear(y)])
Here, the expression within the outer parentheses is to be read as follows:
‘the things such that, for all y, y is one of them just in case y is a polar bear.’
Thus, (3c) says, of the things such that, for all y, y is one of them just in case y
is a polar bear, that, generically speaking, they have four paws. In
other words, (3c) says of the polar bears that they generally, usually, or
characteristically have four paws. Similarly, on Koslicki’s view, the logical
form of,
16. The polar bear is widespread.
is as follows:
16b. Widespread((iX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear(y)])
Thus, (16b) says of the polar bears that they are widespread. And so (3) and
(16) are about the same things, namely, the polar bears. They differ only in
144 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
the sort of thing they say about the polar bears: The predicate ascribed in
(16b) (denoted by ‘Widespread’) is collective, whereas the predicate
ascribed in (3c) (denoted by ‘Have-four-paws’) is distributive (though
not strictly universal). Since such a view implies that (3) and (16) have the
same subject, this view can make sense of the anaphoric reference in
sentences such as ‘the polar bear has four paws and is widespread’ or ‘the
polar bear is nearing extinction and lives on a diet of marine animals.’
Such a view can straightforwardly be extended to repeatable artwork
sentences. On the resulting view, the logical forms of (4) and (29) will be as
follows:
4c. Are-15-min-long((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-Moonlight-Sonata
-performance(y)])
17b. Popular((ØX))(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-Moonlight-Sonata-performance(y)])
Once again, because this view implies that (4) and (17) have the same
subject, this view can explain the anaphoric reference in sentences such
as (20).
This view also solves the Russell’s paradox problem we discussed at the
end of the last section. For according to the present view, the logical form of,
26. Kinds that are not members of themselves are lovely.
is as follows (where k ranges over kinds):
26b. Are-lovely((ØX)(8k)[X(k)$Is-not-a-member-of-itself(k)])
The expression within the outer parentheses is to be read as follows: ‘the
kinds such that, for any kind, k, k is one of them just in case k is not a member
of itself .’ This sentence thus says, of those kinds, that, generically speaking,
they are lovely. Hence, on the view we are now considering, sentence (26)
makes no reference to any kind consisting of all those kinds that are not
members of themselves. And so this view avoids Russell’s paradox.17 Note
that on Koslicki’s view, the predicates that appear in the target sentences are
not ordinary, first-order predicates, but are rather second-order predicates
(we are using the bold font to represent second-order predicates). Thus, on
17 The use of second-order quantification to avoid problems raised by Russell’s paradox goes back to
Boolos (1984). Q: How much is understood about truth conditions of generics? A: Not one iota,
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 145
But now we have a problem. For consider sentences such as the following:
33. The polar bear has four paws, and so does Chompy.
34. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long, and so is the
time-out I just received.
On Koslicki’s view, in the first conjuct of (33), ‘has four paws’ picks out a
higher-order predicate. While understanding this conjunct might require
appreciating the connection between this higher-order predicate and
the first-order predicate Has-four-paws that applies to individuals, it is only
the higher-order predicate, not the first-order predicate, that figures in the
structure of the first conjunct. However, what the second conjunct ascribes
to Chompy cannot be a higher-order predicate. It must instead be the first-
order predicate Has-four-paws. And since the latter doesn’t figure in the first
conjunct, it is very hard to makes sense of the anaphoric predication in (33).
And the same applies to (34). If Koslicki’s view is extended to repeatable
artwork sentences, then it will imply that in (34) ‘is roughly fifteen minutes
long’ picks out a higher-order predicate, which is not the sort of thing that
can apply to directly to the referent of ‘the time-out I just received.’ Hence,
on this view, we cannot make sense of the anaphoric predication in (34).
make sense of the anaphoric predication in (33), but it faces serious difficul-
ties. The problem is that it is unclear how an ordinary first-order predicate
could be applied plurally to the polar bears. To see the force of this problem,
consider the following sentences:
35. Polar bears consume a ton of fish per day. And so does Moby Dick.
36. Coral reefs cover a huge area. And so does Alaska.
On the view we are now considering, the logical forms of (35) and (36) are
as follows:
35a. Consume-a-ton-of-fish-per-day((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear
(y)]) & Consume-a-ton-of-fish-per-day(Moby Dick)
36a. Cover-a-huge-area((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-coral-reef(y)]) & Cover-
a-huge-area(Alaska)
But there’s a problem with this view. For sentences (35) and (36) are
ambiguous. There is one reading of (35) on which the first sentence
means that polar bears usually, typically, or characteristically consume a
ton of fish per day, and there is another reading on which it means that,
collectively, polar bears consume a ton of fish per day. Similarly, there is a
reading of (36) on which the first sentence means that coral reefs usually,
typically or characteristically cover a huge area, and there is another reading
on which it means that, collectively, coral reefs cover a huge area. What this
shows is that there is more than one way in which a given predicate can
apply to the polar bears, or to coral reefs. The very same predicate, ‘con-
sumes a ton of fish per day’ can be said to apply to the polar bears because it
applies to them individually, or because it applies to them collectively. By
analyzing the logical form of (35) simply as (35a), the view we are now
considering obscures this distinction, and hence it fails to account for the
ambiguity of (35). Similarly, in analyzing (36) simply as (36a), this view
obscures the distinction between the two ways in which the predicate
picked out by ‘covers a huge area’ can be said to apply to the coral reefs.
Hence, this view fails to account for the ambiguity of (36).
So how are we to account for the ambiguity of (35) and (36)? We don’t
want the two readings of (35) simply to involve two distinct predicates
ascribing two distinct properties. For, on each of the two readings of (35),
we must explain the anaphoric predication in ‘so does Moby Dick.’ But what
is said of Moby Dick does not vary between the two readings of (35). And so
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 149
it seems to follow that the same property must be picked out by ‘eats a ton of
fish’ on the two readings of (35). Nor do we want to say that the two
readings of (35) differ because the subjects have different referents. We don’t
want to say, for example, that the difference between the individual and
collective readings of (35) is that on the individual reading, ‘polar bears’
refers to individual polar bears, whereas on the collective reading ‘polar
bears’ refers to the collection of polar bears. For consider the following pairs
of sentences:
37. Polar bears consume a ton of fish per day. And they have four paws.
38. Polar bears consume a ton of fish per day. And they are widespread.
Note that in each of (37) and (38), there are two possible readings of the first
sentence. But the explanation of this ambiguity can’t be that, in the case of
the individual reading, the subject refers to something individual, whereas
in the case of the collective reading, the subject refers to something collec-
tive. For if this were the explanation, then on the reading of (37) where the
first sentence has the collective reading, the anaphoric reference in the
second sentence would make no sense, and on the reading of (38) where
the first sentence has the individual reading, the second sentence would
make no sense.
And so we are in the following predicament. We want to explain the
two readings of ‘polar bears consume a ton of fish per day.’ We don’t want
to explain this difference by positing an ambiguity in ‘polar bears.’ More-
over, we don’t want to say that the bare plural ‘polar bears’ is a singular
term referring to some special entity (e.g. an abstract object, or the fusion,
or polar bears, etc.) for then we will run into the same kind of over-
generation problem we discussed in Section I. Instead, we want a view on
which the bare plural ‘polar bears,’ like the definite singular ‘the polar
bear,’ refers plurally to polar bears. Thus, we want it to be the case that, on
both interpretations of (35), ‘polar bears’ refers to the things such that, for
all y, y is one of them just in case y is a polar bear. And so, on either
reading of,
39. Polar bears consume a ton of fish per day.
we want the subject to be:
40. (ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear (y)]
150 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
Thus, on the view we are proposing, the target sentences refer plurally to
many individuals. And if a target sentence involves an ordinary, first-order
predicate (that is, the kind of predicate that can apply directly to an
individual), then the sentence involves an unvoiced operator that indicates
how the property picked out by the predicate applies to the many individ-
uals referred to by the subject.
Note, however, that some target sentences do not involve ordinary, first-
order predicates. Rather, they involve higher-order predicates that cannot
apply directly to individuals. Consider, for example:
42. Polar bears are nearly extinct.
Unlike the property picked out by the predicate in (39), the property picked
out in (42) cannot be applied directly to individuals: No individual polar
bear, bald eagle, or hump back whale can be nearly extinct—it’s polar bears,
bald eagles, or hump back whales that can be nearly extinct. Thus, while
the subject that the predicate ‘consumes a ton of fish per day’ applies to
is individual, the subject that the predicate ‘are nearly extinct’ applies to is
plural. We don’t, therefore, need an operator that indicates how this
property applies to the polar bears. Hence, on our view, the logical form
of (42) is as follows:
42a. Nearly-Extinct((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear(y)])
Thus, when it comes to target sentences involving higher-order predi-
cates—predicates that pick out properties that cannot be applied directly
to individuals, such as ‘nearly extinct’ and ‘widespread’—our view coin-
cides with Koslicki’s: At the level of logical form, these sentences consist in a
higher-order predicate applied to an expression that refers plurally to many
things. Our view differs from Koslicki’s view only with respect to sentences
that involve what appear to be ordinary predicates, such as:
3. The polar bear has four paws.
And it makes sense that (3) should differ in its logical form from (42) and
from (16) (‘the polar bear is widespread’). For we can say, ‘the polar bear has
four paws, and so does Chompy,’ but we can’t say, ‘the polar bear is nearly
extinct, and so is Chompy,’ nor can we say ‘the polar bear is widespread,
and so is Chompy.’ And so we should want an account according to which
(3) involves an ordinary, first-order predicate whereas (42) and (16) do not.
152 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
Another advantage of our view is that it can explain some prima facie
puzzling differences between different generic sentences. We noted earlier
that sentences like the following are ambiguous, as they allow for an
individual and a collective reading:
39. Polar bears consume a ton of fish per day.
43. Coral reefs cover a huge area.
Note, however, that the following sentences are not similarly ambiguous:
44. A polar bear consumes a ton of fish per day.
45. A coral reef covers a huge area.
There is no reading of (44) on which it means that polar bears together
consume a ton of fish per day, nor is there a reading of (45) on which it
means that coral reefs together cover a huge area. Note, further, that while
each of the following sentences could be true:
16. The polar bear is widespread.
17. The polar bear is nearly extinct.
46. Polar bears are widespread.
42. Polar bears are nearly extinct.
The following sentences could not be true:
47. A polar bear is widespread.
48. A polar bear is nearly extinct.
All of these differences can be straightforwardly explained, on our view, if
we hold that the difference between the definite singular (‘the polar bear’),
the indefinite singular (‘a polar bear’) and the bare plural (‘polar bears’) in
the subject position of the sentences under consideration marks a difference
in the unvoiced operators that the sentence may contain. In particular, the
indefinite singular, when it is used in a sentence in which no particular
contextually salient individual is being referred to, requires the generic operator;
this requirement explains both why there are no collective readings of (44)
and (45) and why there can be no true reading of (47) and (48). Thus, our
view can nicely explain some differences between sentences involving
indefinite singular, definite singular, and bare plural noun phrases in the
subject position—differences which are mysterious on some other views of
these sentences, such as Koslicki’s.
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 153
19 There are some properties that can be combined with definite singular noun-phrases collectively.
For instance, it seems fine to say ‘the automobile is a big polluter.’ However, such predicates seem to be
the exception to the rule. There is an intuitive, natural class that the collective-operator-excluding
predicates form, though what it is in virtue of that those predicates, rather than these more unusual ones,
exclude the collective operator, is a project that is beyond the scope of this chapter.
Q: Why was the linguist relieved when she learned of the role ‘wide’ plays in ‘widespread?’
A: Because a little morpheme always helps with the pain.
154 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
34. The Moonlight Sonata is roughly fifteen minutes long, and so is the
time-out I just received.
But such sentences pose no difficulty for our view. For on our view these
sentences have the following form:
G
33a. Has-four-paws((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-polar-bear(y)]) & Has-four-
paws(Chompy)
G
34a. Is-under-15-min-long((ØX)(8y)[X(y)$Is-a-Moonlight-Sonata-
performance(y)]) & Is-under-15-min-long(the time-out I just
received))
In each case, the two conjuncts contain the same predicate, and so the
anaphoric predication is unproblematic.
V. Conclusion
We began this chapter by noting that the semantics we give for repeatable
artwork sentences can have consequences for our ontology of repeatable
artworks. Insofar as we take these sentences to be true, we can learn about
the world by learning about their truth conditions. This is nothing new; it is
not uncommon, both in the literature about repeatable artworks and in
metaphysics more generally, to add to one’s ontology in an attempt to get
the right semantic results. For instance, if something like Simple Semantics
is true, and we think that some repeatable artwork sentences, like ‘The
Moonlight Sonata is under twenty minutes long,’ are true, then we will be
committed to positing individual entities with which we can identify things
like The Moonlight Sonata. But, contrary to what may be otherwise assumed,
we have argued that Simple Semantics is not true, and we have presented an
alternative semantics for our target sentences, which has no steep
ontological commitments. This semantics has motivation that is independ-
ent of ontological considerations, and unlike Simple Semantics, this view is
ontologically undemanding. It requires only that we posit manifestations of
the relevant artworks. That is, to account for the truth of sentences about,
e.g. The Moonlight Sonata, we need merely posit some (at least possible)
Moonlight Sonata performances. We are free to deny the existence of any
156 SHIEVA KLEINSCHMIDT AND JACOB ROSS
References
Boolos, George (1984) ‘To Be is to Be a Value of a Variable (or to Be Some Values
of Some Variables)’ Journal of Philosophy 81: 430–49
Caplan, Ben and Matheson, Carl (2004) ‘Can a Musical Work Be Created?’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 44: 113–34
—— —— (2006) ‘Defending Musical Perdurantism’ British Journal of Aesthetics
46(1): 59–69
—— —— (2008) ‘Defending “Defending Musical Perdurantism”’ British Journal of
Aesthetics 48(1): 80–5
Carlson, Gregory (1982) ‘Generic Terms and Generic Sentences’ Journal of Philo-
sophical Logic 11: 145–81
Carlson, Gregory and Pelletier, Francis (1995) The Generic Book (Chicago: Univer-
sity of Chicago Press)
Currie, Gregory (1989) An Ontology of Art (New York: St Martin’s Press)
Dodd, Julian (2004) ‘Types, Continuants, and the Ontology of Music’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 44(4): 342–60
Kivy, Peter (1983) ‘Platonism in Music: A Kind of Defense’ Grazer philosophische
Studien 19: 109–29
Koslicki, Kathrin (1999) ‘Genericity and Logical Form’ Mind and Language 14(4):
441–67
Leslie, Sarah Jane (forthcoming) ‘Generics’ The Routledge Companion to the Philoso-
phy of Language
Levinson, Jerrold (1980) ‘What a Musical Work Is’ Journal of Philosophy 77(1): 5–28
REPEATABLE ARTWORK SENTENCES AND GENERICS 157
* Thanks to Sherri Irvin and Christy Mag Uidhir for comments on this chapter.
162 ALLAN HAZLETT
1 The scrupulous reader may substitute this material conditional below, mutatis mutandis, when I talk
about repeatable artworks, as well as when I talk about abstract objects. Alternatively, you will be fine if
you allow that repeatable-artwork talk and abstract-object talk aren’t ontologically committing (Cam-
eron 2008, 2010).
AGAINST REPEATABLE ARTWORKS 163
2 Davies says musical works are socially constructed (2003, pp. 30, 40), but it’s not clear what he means
by this. His lists of other socially constructed things include inflation, books, universities, weeds, the
market, parking tickets, general elections, the Open Championship, Chardonnay, and fluffy dice. It’s not
clear what all these things have in common that warrants calling them ‘socially constructed’. Davies does
suggest a characterization of socially constructed things, writing of musical works that ‘[t]hey are subject
to variability and change in their form and substance, depending on behaviors and organizations that
people contingently choose to adopt or revise’, (2003, p. 40) and he goes on to reject four other claims
that might be associated with the claim of social construction (pp. 41–6). The notion remains obscure.
3 This is so, even if some artworks are sets (with essential members), e.g. a series of screenprints.
164 ALLAN HAZLETT
But this is the wrong way to understand the ontology of biological species.
The theory of evolution by natural selection not only undermined the idea
of biological categories as eternal and unchanging, but also provided us with
resources for a nominalist understanding of biological species. After Darwin,
we are able to abandon the conception of species as universals (whether
Platonic or Aristotelian, whether eternal or temporal) and move towards the
conception of species as ‘groups of interbreeding natural populations that
are reproductively isolated from other such groups’ (Mayr 1988, p. 318).
Biological species aren’t abstract historical individuals; they’re just groups of
organisms, related in certain ways (including historical ways). (In general,
one could use a relational understanding of group membership to avoid
positing abstracta.) With Mayr’s ‘biological species concept’, we can give
up the problematic talk of biological species as entities (whether as universals
or as particulars) and replace it with (relatively) unproblematic talk of
individual organisms related to one another. On this new conception, the
boundaries of ‘species’ (equivalence classes on the relevant relations of
geographic isolation and interbreeding ability) will be fuzzy and subject to
continual change. And that’s what we want, because that’s what Darwin
discovered. Thus, in contemporary biology, talk of ‘species’ is shorthand
for talk of groups of related organisms.4 We cannot analogize repeatable
artworks to biological species—unless we say that talk of ‘repeatable
It appears that abstract objects have all their intrinsic properties essentially,
and that concrete objects do not have all their intrinsic properties essentially.
Abstract objects have maximally ‘big’ or ‘thick’ essences; concrete objects
never do, and typically have relatively ‘small’ or ‘thin’ essences. This raises a
puzzle for the naturalistically inclined metaphysician. Abstract objects are
noticeably different, in this regard, from the paradigm of a naturalistically
5 As well, the normativity of biological species is rightly controversial (Bedau 1993; Dretske 2000;
Millikan 1984). Very briefly, to derive some normative claim about x from some claim about x’s natural
history seems to be a instance of the ‘naturalistic fallacy’. So we cannot easily explain the normativity of
repeatable artworks by appeal to the supposedly unproblematic normativity of biological species.
166 ALLAN HAZLETT
acceptable entity: concrete physical objects. So we’re faced with the ques-
tion of whether abstract objects are naturalistically acceptable, given their
divergence from our paradigm.
More importantly, abstract objects not only diverge from our paradigm,
but they diverge from it in a surprising way. Again, Yablo writes:
[T]he null set and the number 11 are thought to exist in every possible world. This
is prima facie surprising, for one normally supposes that existence is inversely related
to essence: the bigger x’s essence, the ‘harder’ it is for x to exist, and so the fewer
worlds it inhabits. And yet [(pure) abstract objects are] extremely well endowed
in the essence department, and missing from not even a single world. (Ibid.,
pp. 220–1)
How can there be objects with maximally ‘big’ or ‘thick’ essences that are
eternal and exist at every possible world? Consider the contrast when it
comes to destruction: concrete objects, which have relatively ‘small’ or
‘thin’ essences, are going out of existence all the time, in virtue of losing
one of their few essential properties; (pure) abstract objects, which have
maximally ‘big’ or ‘thick’ essences, never go out of existence, anywhere, ever.
This aspect of the puzzle arises in connection with pure abstract objects,
but this premise—that abstract objects have all of their intrinsic properties
essentially—applies to impure abstract objects: {Eiffel Tower} essentially
has the Eiffel Tower as its only member. Just as pure sets aren’t intrinsically
different in different worlds (or at different times), impure sets aren’t
intrinsically different in different worlds (or at different times). Their
members may well be—the Eiffel Tower could have been intrinsically
different than it actually is, and it undergoes changes at the actual world at
all the time—but impure sets do not inherit the intrinsic properties of their
members. This isn’t obvious with singletons, but it is with any other impure
set: consider the intrinsic properties of {Brutus, Caesar} vis-à-vis the
intrinsic properties of Brutus and the intrinsic properties of Caesar.
So what’s going on here? Why are abstract objects modally inflexible?
A first step in answering this question is recognizing that the existence of
(pure) abstract objects (whatever this amounts to) makes no demands on the
world (in a sense that would eventually need to be articulated). There is
nothing the world must be like for it to be the case that (in whatever sense
this is true) (pure) abstract objects exist. The necessary existence of all
instances of the number ‘2’ (whatever this amounts to) isn’t a matter of
AGAINST REPEATABLE ARTWORKS 167
there being a stubborn regularity across the space of possible worlds, with
each of them having a ‘2’ in it.
Something similar needs to be said of impure abstract objects. {Eiffel
Tower} exists only if the Eiffel Tower exists, so {Eiffel Tower} seems
supervenient in a way that all instances of the number ‘2’ isn’t. But the
existence of {Eiffel Tower} also makes no demands on the world, at least in
the sense that the existence of {Eiffel Tower} is nothing over and above the
existence of the Eiffel Tower. There is no additional way the world must be
to ensure that, in addition to the Eiffel Tower, it also includes {Eiffel
Tower}. The existence of {Eiffel Tower} makes no demands of its own on
the world; the only demands made are those made by the existence of the
Eiffel Tower.
That the existence of abstract objects (whatever this amounts to) makes
no demands on the world explains why it can be the case that abstract
objects have all their intrinsic properties essentially. Recall the puzzle about
destruction. We can now see: concrete objects get destroyed so often
because their existence makes demands on the world, and with changes in
the world come changes in their existence. If abstract objects were like that,
their existence would be even more fragile, given their ‘bigger’ or ‘thicker’
essences. Only because their existence makes no demands on the world are
they able to survive in a plurality of diverse and changing worlds. Having
accidental intrinsic properties is the solution to this problem that concrete
objects use; but a solution is only needed if your existence makes demands
on the world in the first place.
What does it mean to say that the existence of abstract objects makes no
demands on the world? Yablo writes that the truth of statements about
abstract objects ‘does not depend on what may be going on in the realm of
concrete objects and their contingent properties and relations’ (p. 228).
Along similar lines, Agustı́n Rayo (2009) and Ross Cameron (2010) argue
that the truths of mathematics are trivial. Cameron writes:
[T]he truth of any mathematical claim does not demand the existence of numbers,
and it does not demand anything else, hence it does not demand anything at all;
mathematical truths are trivially true, in the sense that they have trivial truth
conditions—no conditions have to be met by the world in order for them to be
true. (Cameron 2010, p. 205)
He goes on to argue that, in this sense, mathematical objects exist, but that
they do not really exist—for the truths of mathematics do not require the
168 ALLAN HAZLETT
This is compatible with the claim that artworks have some of their
intrinsic properties essentially (and with the claim that some artworks have
all of their intrinsic properties essentially). Hamlet, you might think, would
not have been Hamlet unless it concerned avenging a father’s murder;
Vongerichten’s dish would not have been that dish if it had been made of
strawberry ice cream. But there are intrinsic properties of artworks—at least
of some artworks, and in particular some paradigm would-be repeatable
artworks—that are not essential properties.
The fact that artworks don’t have all of their intrinsic properties essentially
allows us to make some important observations. For example, Stephen Davies
(2003) argues that some musical works have ‘thicker’ essences than others:
A piece that is specified solely as a melody and chord sequence, leaving instrumen-
tation, elaboration, and overall structure up to its performers, is thinner in consti-
tutive properties than one in which those features are also work-determinative.
(p. 39)
Davies observes that ‘the historical trend has been toward the thickening
of musical works’ (ibid.) and offers as explanation the fact that composers
have lost control over their works: having in the 17th and 18th centuries
conducted their own pieces, they came in the 19th and 20th to see their
scores printed and distributed all over the word (ibid., p. 40). The
‘thickening’ of musical works was an attempt to regain some of that lost
control. Works from the 19th and 20th century have ‘thicker’ essences than
17th and 18th century works, however, only if musical works don’t have all
their intrinsic properties essentially. For if they do have all their intrinsic
properties essentially, then their essences are, and always have been, max-
imally ‘thick’.
The premise is neutral on the question of origin essentialism, since the
relevant properties—e.g. being composed by so-and-so—are not intrinsic
properties. For what it’s worth, it seems to me that we should reject origin
essentialism. Some defenders of musical works (cf. Davies 2003, p. 44; Kivy
1993, pp. 70–3; Levinson 1980, pp. 20–1) argue that musical works are
essentially composed by their actual composer. Once upon a time (I
would like to say when I was very young) I confused the early modern
philosopher Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount Saint Alban, with the 20th century
painter Francis Bacon when, knowing nothing of the latter, I encountered
his Figure with Meat (1954) and briefly considered it as one of the most
170 ALLAN HAZLETT
prescient and original and downright incredible works of the 17th century.
Not quite. But had the Viscount made that painting back then, it would have
been an extraordinary achievement, and a very different achievement than
that of its actual creator. The coherence of this idea suggests the falsity of
origin essentialism.
The essentialist might appeal to the fact that we sometimes want to make
the following kind of modal claim:
Anybody with a wig stuffed full of counterpoint could have written the Toccata in
E major. But only Bach could have composed the Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C,
the Fantasia in G, and the incomparable Passacaglia in C minor.6
might think that the meaning of an artwork is changing all the time, that
every change in the world engenders a change in the meaning of the work,
conceived of as a socially, culturally, or historically constructed individual.8
On any such view, the meaning of an artwork is not among its intrinsic
properties. And essential extrinsic properties are not my concern here.
Dodd (2007) argues that musical works are abstract types, and accepts that
this entails that musical works have all of their intrinsic properties essen-
tially (2007, pp. 54–6, 86–92). Thus he accepts that musical works
could not have been intrinsically different than they actually are, that (as a
consequence) musical works cannot be intrinsically changed, and that:
‘Completing a work’ . . . is not a matter of bringing to an end a process of moulding a
single thing; it consists in arriving at a work by means of successively indicating
other entities on the way. Any development of the score, however minor, amounts
to the indication of a distinct object. (Ibid., p. 91)
Dodd says that this is ‘the tiniest wrinkle’ for his theory, which remains
‘quite coherent’ (ibid., p. 92). We should, on his view, consider this
‘a relatively minor conflict between the type/token theory and our ordinary
thought and talk about works’ (ibid., p. 90). Peter Kivy (1993) also takes the
intrinsic properties of musical works to be essential properties, such that two
works with the same sound structure are a fortiori the same work (pp. 60–6).
So perhaps we should reject the premise that repeatable artworks have
accidental intrinsic properties for theoretical reasons: because the best
theory of repeatable artworks available entails that repeatable artworks
don’t have accidental intrinsic properties. Against someone committed
to such a theory, my appeals above (e.g. to the fact that ‘Pictures at an
Exhibition’ could have been different) would beg the question.
This philosophical problem has a familiar structure: the three premises
cannot be consistently conjoined with realism about repeatable artworks. So
either one of the three premises or realism must go. Whether rejecting
realism—which I favour—is plausible will depend on what sense the
anti-realist can make of what seemed like repeatable artworks. We’ll return
to this briefly below, and sketch two anti-realist accounts of would-be
repeatable artworks.
8 Cf. Davies (2003), who supports ‘ontological contextualism, which acknowledges the socio-
historical embeddedness of some of the features making up the work’ (p. 34).
172 ALLAN HAZLETT
9 There is also a semantic task for the anti-realist, vis-à-vis language that appears to refer to repeatable
artworks. For a charitable semantics of this kind, see Cameron 2008 (see also Dodd 2007, pp. 20–5).
174 ALLAN HAZLETT
common origin. Again, one might apply this idea to would-be repeatable
artworks in general, or to specific types of works.
Second anti-realist account: An austere eliminativist account, on which
would-be instances of would-be repeatable artworks are understood as copies
of some original artwork. Each token plate of tuna tartare is not a culinary
work in its own right, but a copy of some original token plate, an original
culinary work created by Vongerichten; this is what unites the token plates.
The original culinary work, on this view, is incapable of being repeated
(being a concrete token), but capable of being copied. As above, one might
apply this idea to would-be repeatable artworks in general, or to specific types
of works.
The profligate and austere views of culinary works differ not in their
ontology, nor even in their understanding of the fundamental metaphysics
of cuisine; they differ only in their individuation of culinary works. Given
one hundred plates of tuna tartare (based on Vongerichten’s recipe), the
profligate view sees one hundred (derivative) culinary works of art, while
the austere view sees one culinary work of art (viz. Vongerichten’s original),
with one hundred copies of that work.
With these options in hand, the anti-realist should be able to make sense
of would-be repeatable artworks, perhaps (as seems plausible) applying
different options to different types of works. The austere account has
some intuitive appeal when applied to literary works: we can identify
Sense and Sensibility with a token manuscript written by Austen herself,
and understand would-be instances of Sense and Sensibility as token copies of
that original token manuscript. And we should not be afraid of applying the
austere view to the performing arts, on the ground that copying is artless or
mechanical. Nor should we assume that in copying one aims only at fidelity.
When I make printed copies of your handwritten novel with movable type,
my concern is not only with fidelity, but with creating copies of your novel
that are more readable than the original. And I can make a copy of
something whilst aiming for something less than perfect fidelity, either for
prudential or for artistic reasons (e.g. a particular intended method of
copying might be essential to a particular original artwork). Copying
might require great skill and involve significant creativity; thus the austere
view applied to the performing arts does not violate the intuition that
performance involves creativity rather than slavish fidelity (Davies 2003,
pp. 62–3; cf. Dodd 2007, p. 33). There may be a fine art of copying; so to say
AGAINST REPEATABLE ARTWORKS 175
10 On the ontology of photography, see Rohrbaugh (2003) and Mag Uidhir (2012).
11 The same, mutatis mutandis, when it comes to the austere eliminativist approach applied to
culinary works.
176 ALLAN HAZLETT
there being no on to logical difference between the two cases: in neither case
are you face to face with the artwork itself. Whether by convention or by
nature, this is a problem for engaging with a painting, but not for engaging
with a novel. (To the extent that it is unsatisfying to say that we engage only
with a copy when we engage with some type of work, the anti-realist will
need to adopt a profligate eliminativist account.)
We have considered austere eliminativist approaches to several types of
artworks, but a profligate account may be more appropriate in many cases.
Consider the performing arts: on this view each performance of Hamlet is a
distinct work of art. We might then conceive of the relationship between
performance and play as follows: Hamlet the play is a literary work, created
by Shakespeare himself; token performances of Hamlet are theatrical works,
created by various actors, directors, (etc.) united in virtue of intrinsic
similarity and common relation to Hamlet the play.
This kind of view is attractive when we consider the particularity
of would-be instances of would-be repeatable artworks. Recall Walter
Benjamin’s idea:
Even the most perfect reproduction of a work of art is lacking in one element: its
presence in time and space, its unique existence at that place where it happens to
be . . . In the case of the art object a most sensitive nucleus—namely, its authenti-
city—is interfered with. (1936, pp. 220–1)
Token musical and theatrical performances may seem to have this kind of
‘aura’, and so may token plates of food. This suggests that we should treat
these tokens as distinct works of art—as on the profligate eliminativist
approach.12 But it is now clear that the decision to treat a particular token
as a copy of some original or as a distinct work of art is not settled by the
metaphysics of the situation, but on our intuitions about the individuation
of artworks. As Arthur Danto (1979) observed, a ‘perverse connoisseur’
12 The emphasis on mechanical reproduction is a red herring: two distinct token individuals can’t
share an aura simply because they’re two distinct token individuals, which a fortiori enjoy different
locations in time, space, history, culture, etc. Menard’s Quixote doesn’t share an aura with that of
Cervantes, but the one isn’t a mechanical reproduction of the other. A McDonald’s double cheeseburger
in Tokyo has a different aura (a different location in time and space, but also a different social meaning, a
different culinary context) than a McDonald’s double cheeseburger in Texas. Benjamin’s objection to
mechanical reproduction is a plea for the particularity of token individuals, but it makes trouble for
repeatable artworks whether in or out of the age of mechanical reproduction: if the authentic nucleus of
an artwork is tied to a particular time and place, then artworks must be token individuals (objects,
events), and neither abstract nor repeatable.
AGAINST REPEATABLE ARTWORKS 177
might maintain that ‘I missed something marvelous if I do not see Last Tango
in Paris at the Trans-Lux 85th Street on Friday at 8:00 p.m’ (pp. 100–1)
thereby applying a profligate eliminativist approach to token film screenings.
My point is that one’s evaluative intuitions will drive the choice between
an austere and an eliminativist approach: if one sees a particular token as
particularly marvelous, one will tend to see it as a distinct work of art. But this
tendency should be tempered by the point made above that copying need not
be artless and mechanical.
I conclude that the anti-realist has a number of attractive options when
it comes to understanding would-be instances of would-be repeatable
artworks. We should therefore maintain that artworks do not (in general)
have all their intrinsic properties essentially, and conclude that there are no
repeatable artworks.
References
Bedau, Mark (1993) ‘Naturalism and Teleology’ in Stephen J. Wagner and Richard
Warner (eds) Naturalism: A Critical Appraisal (South Bend: University of Notre
Dame Press)
Benjamin, Walter (1936/1968) ‘Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen
Reproduzierbarkeit’ Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 5: 1, translated as ‘The Work of
Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’ in Walter Benjamin, Illuminations
(New York: Schocken Books)
Borges, Jorge Luis (1939/1998) ‘Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote’ Sur 56: 7–16,
translated as ‘Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote’ in Jorge Luis Borges,
Collected Fictions (New York: Penguin)
Cameron, Ross (2008) ‘There Are No Things That are Musical Works’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 48: 295–314
—— (2010) ‘Necessity and Triviality’ Australasian Journal of Philosophy 88: 401–15
Caplan, Ben and Matheson, C. (2004) ‘Can a Musical Work be Created?’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 44: 113–34
Cox, Renee (1985) ‘Are Musical Works Discovered?’ Journal of Aesthetics and Art
Criticism 43: 367–74
Danto, Arthur (1979) ‘Moving Pictures’ Quarterly Review of Film Studies 4(1): 1–21,
reprinted in N. Carroll and J. Choi (eds) Philosophy of Film and Motion Pictures: An
Anthology (Blackwell, 2005) 100–12
Davies, Stephen (2003) Themes in the Philosophy of Music (Oxford: Oxford University
Press)
178 ALLAN HAZLETT
* Thanks to Elizabeth Barnes, Ben Caplan, Anthony Everett, Christy Mag Uidhir, Amie Thomasson,
Jason Turner, Tatjana von Solodkoff, Robbie Williams, and Richard Woodward for helpful discussion.
180 ROSS P. CAMERON
1 I am the walrus.
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 181
will finally succeed in establishing that the external world is simply an illusion,
and we will therefore conclude that fire trucks, the Beatles, Lovecraft, etc.
simply do not exist. Even so, some arguments such as those above will
remain: we would merely replace (B1) with ‘There are as many Beatles as
there are round squares’, and (A1) with ‘The external world and desert
mirages have something in common—they are both illusory.’ More import-
antly, the first lines’ being susceptible to this type of philosophical refutation
still does not ease the puzzle. For while we might grudgingly admit that the
external world might be an illusion, our credence that it is so is not high; we
invest an extremely high credence in there being some truth of the form of the
first line of each of arguments A–D. Rational arguments should be credence
preserving, so we should invest extremely high credence in their conclusions,
and that is enough to yield the puzzle.
The sense in which the first lines of arguments A–D are uncontroversial is
that philosophical qualms with the conclusions don’t seem like good reasons to
reject the first lines. It would be perverse to conclude that there aren’t as many
Beatles as there are seasons in the year because there are no numbers, or that
Mozart didn’t compose his first symphony at eight years of age because there are
no musical works. The first lines of the ‘Something from Nothing’ arguments
are on a far stronger epistemic footing than any metaphysical principles that
are in apparent conflict with their conclusions. We need another option.
We need to accept a meta-ontology according to which the conclusions
of arguments A–D can be accepted as true without being ontologically
committing to the metaphysically recalcitrant entities in question. There are
various proposals along these lines in the literature. (See, inter alia, Fine 2009;
Schaffer 2009; Williams 2010, ms.) My own view is that the ontological
commitments of a claim/theory are those entities that must be invoked as
truth makers for the claim/theory if it is to be held true. (See Cameron 2008b,
2010a, 2010c.) And, crucially, I hold that an existential claim can be made true
by something other than what it says exists: in that case, the entities quantified
over are not ontological commitments of the claim in question, and hence
metaphysical qualms about those entities are misplaced if taken as a reason to
deny the claim. As long as the entities we need to invoke as truth makers are
metaphysically acceptable by our own lights, we need not worry.
The challenge regarding aesthetic ontology, then, is to give an account of
what makes true our claims about the aesthetic realm so that the truth makers
we invoke do not involve created abstracta (and, for those with nominalist
182 ROSS P. CAMERON
2 I discuss the problem for musical works in Cameron (2008a, 2010a). In those papers I didn’t actually
provide a nominalist friendly metaphysic, as the truth makers I put forward appealed to abstracta, albeit
not created abstracta. I think a nominalist version of that broad proposal is available, though I can’t get
into that here.
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 183
There are two thoughts here that I am utterly in sympathy with. The first is
that the existence of the literary practice is sufficient for the existence of
the fictional characters in question: as I would put it, that we appeal to
something to do with the literary practice rather than the fictional character
itself when specifying the truth maker for claims concerning the existence of,
and properties of, the fictional being. The second is that it is ‘unnecessary . . . to
deny that there are fictional characters, so understood’. I take it Thomasson
is saying that once you accept that this is the correct account of the
conditions under which fictional characters exist, metaphysical scruples
about their existence are revealed to be misplaced: as I would put it, what
needs to cohere with our metaphysical scruples are what we ultimately invoke
as truth makers—if ‘A exists’ is made true by B then metaphysical concerns
about the nature of A shouldn’t arise—all that matters is whether we’re happy
to admit B into our ontology.
But while I am in sympathy with the main thrust of what Thomasson says
about fictional characters, there are nonetheless some parts of her overall
theory that I want to distance myself from. Thomasson’s deflationary
attitude (2009) towards questions concerning the existence of fictional
characters is part of a broad deflationism with regard to existence
questions in general. Thomasson thinks that there is no good philosophical
discipline of ontology. When it comes to the existence of Fs, the task of the
philosopher is to do some conceptual analysis and discover—by reflection
on the concept of F-ness—the conditions under which Fs exist. It is
then an empirical—and non-philosophical—question as to whether those
conditions are met. So for example, consider the debate amongst ontologists
as to whether there are tables: Sider (2001) and Markosian (1998) say there
are, van Inwagen (1990) and Merricks (2001) say that there are not. All of
them agree, of course, that there are some things arranged table-wise. In that
case, thinks Thomasson, this debate is a confused one: for some conceptual
analysis of the concept table will reveal that what it takes for there to be a table
184 ROSS P. CAMERON
3 It is, I think, a substantive metaphysical question not just what in particular reality is like at the
fundamental level but what the very structure of the fundamental level is like. I’ve been talking as if the
fundamental truths are ones concerning the existence of things and the properties and relations holding
of/between those things, but it being a substantive issue which things exist, and what properties/relations
hold of them, at this level. But it is also a substantive issue whether fundamental reality is appropriately
described in subject/predicate form. The strictest version of truth maker theory holds that the funda-
mental truths are just about what there is and never about how those things are (see Cameron
(forthcoming)). Or one could even hold that the fundamental truths are not even quantificational—
that at rock bottom, reality doesn’t consist of there being things at all (see Turner (2011)); given that
possibility, Thomasson could be right that existence questions are always resolvable by conceptual
analysis and empirical investigation and that there is no good discipline of ontology; but still we
would be left with the question as to how reality ultimately is such as to make true all these existence
claims.
186 ROSS P. CAMERON
certain characters in the story are identical. Here is his story in full (Everett
2005, p. 629):
Frackworld: No one was absolutely sure whether Frick and Frack were really the
same person or not. Some said that they were definitely two different people. True,
they looked very much alike, but they had been seen in different places at the same
time. Others claimed that such cases were merely an elaborate hoax and that Frick
had been seen changing his clothes and wig to, as it were, become Frack. All that
I can say for certain is that there were some very odd similarities between Frick and
Frack but also some striking differences.
Everett then tries to cause trouble for the fictional realist by arguing as
follows. According to the Frackworld fiction, it is indeterminate whether
Frick is Frack. By fictional realism, Frick and Frack exist. Are Frick and
Frack identical (asking now whether the fictional objects are identical
simpliciter, not whether it is true according to the fiction that they are
identical)? Plausibly, the actual identity or distinctness of fictional characters
should be determined by whether or not it is true according to the relevant
fiction(s) that they are identical: Bilbo is not Gandalf in reality because it is
true according to The Lord of the Rings that Bilbo is not Gandalf; Morgoth
is in reality Melkor because it is true according to The Silmarillion
that Morgoth is Melkor. In that case, it is actually indeterminate whether
Frick is Frack; but Evans has shown that indeterminate identity is impossible.
Reductio of fictional realism.
Before proceeding, a couple of points about Everett’s case. I don’t think
the Frackworld fiction actually does much to sell the idea that, according to
the fiction, Frick and Frack are indeterminately identical. Starting the story
with ‘No one was absolutely sure . . . ’ and ending with ‘All that I can say for
certain . . . ’ makes it overwhelmingly plausible, to my ears, that we’re
dealing with a merely epistemic issue: that in this fictional world there is a
simple fact of the matter as to the identity or distinctness of Frick and Frack,
but that the inhabitants of this world are unsure as to what it is.
Also, as Benjamin Schnieder and Tatjana von Solodkoff (2009, pp. 140–1)
point out, we must be careful to distinguish between a fiction leaving it open
whether a and b are (according to the fiction) identical and a fiction
positively determining that the identity or distinctness of a and b is
(according to the fiction) not determinately settled one way or the other.
Frackworld certainly leaves open whether Frick and Frack are identical, but
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 187
in just the same way as it leaves open their height. Nothing about Frack-
world suggests that it is true according to the fiction that Frick, say, is
indeterminate in height. Frackworld is simply silent on Frick’s height:
it does not positively settle that Frick’s height is unsettled. This is important,
for compare the following two claims:
(1) If it’s true according to the fiction that a and b are indeterminately
identical then the fictional characters a and b are indeterminately
identical.
(2) If the fiction leaves it open whether a and b are identical then the
fictional characters a and b are indeterminately identical.
(1) is a lot more plausible than (2). There’s no particularly good reason
to think that a fiction’s leaving something open about a character means
that reality leaves it open how the fictional character is in that respect.
Frackworld leaves it open what height Frick is according to the fiction, but
reality plausibly settles what height the fictional entity Frick actually has:
it has no height, because it’s not the kind of entity to have a height
property—although it is the kind of entity to be such as to have a certain
height according to a fiction, and it’s certainly not true according to the fiction
that it has no height. Likewise, reality might settle the issue of Frick and Frack’s
identity even if the fiction leaves it open whether they are identical in the
fiction. This is what Schnieder and von Solodkoff think: if the fiction leaves it
open whether or not they are identical, reality settles it that the fictional
entities are distinct. The idea here is that the default is distinctness, and that
when a fiction uses two names it has to positively settle the identity (according
to the fiction) of the referents for it to be the case in reality that we have one
fictional entity rather than two. If this is right, and I think it is plausible, then
there is no actual indeterminate identity inherited in reality as a result
of Frackworld leaving the identity according to the fiction open.
But what of fictions where it is not simply left open whether a and b are
identical but where it is part of the fiction that it is indeterminate that they
are identical: i.e. where ‘a and b are indeterminately identical’ is true
according to the fiction, as opposed to there simply being no facts about
the identity or distinctness of a and b that are true according to the fiction?
The fictional realist has a couple of options here. One option would be to
restrict one’s fictional realism to characters inhabiting possible fictions. If
188 ROSS P. CAMERON
4 Cf. Breckenridge and Magidor (forthcoming) and Cameron (2010b). This view is very close (to the
point, perhaps, of identity) to the view that Caplan and Muller (ms) recommend to the fictional realist.
190 ROSS P. CAMERON
5 And of course it’s open for her to simply resist this. See e.g. Barnes (2009).
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 191
the Star Wars+ fiction.6 Luke Skywalker+ is, according to the Star Wars+
fiction, the son of Darth Vader+. That is true, simpliciter. It is false, simpliciter,
that Luke Skywalker is, according to the Star Wars fiction, the son of
Darth Vader; it is also false, simpliciter, that he is not: the Star Wars fiction
leaves it open if there is any familial relationship between those characters,
in exactly the same way it leaves open what Darth Vader has for breakfast
according to the fiction. Both fictions and both sets of fictional characters
exist. Utterances of the terms ‘Star Wars’, ‘Darth Vader’ etc. get their
referents based on the context of utterance. An utterance of ‘Star Wars’ in
1977 plausibly refers to the fiction Star Wars, whereas an utterance of the
same term after 1980 plausibly refers to Star Wars+. And so Johnny’s
utterance is false, simpliciter, since it expresses the false simpliciter proposition
that, according to the fiction Star Wars, Luke Skywalker is the son of
Darth Vader, whereas Jimmy’s utterance is true, simpliciter, since it
expresses the true simpliciter proposition that, according to the fiction Star
Wars+, Luke Skywalker+ is the son of Darth Vader+.
So to return to the issue: we want an account of the truth maker for claims
concerning fictional entities that will cohere with this picture of there being
multiple candidate fictional entities to be the referents of terms designating
fictional entities. My suggestion is that the truth maker is the interpretative
act. When engaging with a fiction, we are mandated to interpret it: this act is
what makes true our true utterances concerning the existence of that fiction
and the existence of, and properties of, the fictional characters that exist
according to that fiction.
And so the ultimate metaphysic is nominalist. These acts are concrete
events; at least, they are concrete events if, as I assume, mental events in
general are concrete events. It is true that there are fictions, and fictional
characters, and such things are abstract (since if you list all the things you can
kick, they are not on that list); but our ontology is not what there is, it’s
what there is that ultimately makes true all that is true, and so this ontology
6 I assume that fictional characters are individuated in part by the fictions to which they belong: no
fictional character belongs to more than one fiction. The present proposal makes it easier to believe this
convenient claim. On some views there would be difficult questions about the identity of fictional
characters across fictions: is the fictional character Frasier Crane who appears in Cheers the same as the
character who appears in Frasier, for example? On my view, there are no difficult issues here: there are
simply three fictions—Cheers, Frasier, and Cheers+Frasier, each with their own Frasier Crane. Which
fictional character we pick out with our term ‘Frasier Crane’ depends on context, and might sometimes
be indeterminate.
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 193
7 I don’t mean to suggest that the author’s own interpretation is always the important one. It may
sometimes be that an interpretation other than the author’s has come to have dominance, and that it is
the fiction that is created by that act of interpretation that we refer to by using the name the author
originally attached to a different fiction. Part of the attraction of the present proposal, I think, is its
flexibility: all these different fictions exist, and which we end up referring to simply depends on our
194 ROSS P. CAMERON
utterance of ‘In The Hobbit, Gollum is Gandalf ’ is not true, and so we are
correct in describing my act of interpretation as a misinterpretation.
Let’s see how the account plays out in the two puzzle cases above. If
you’re co-operating with your linguistic community, you intend to use the
term ‘Star Wars’ to refer to the canonical fiction created by George Lucas.
But what is canon changes over time for a fiction like this: films (regrettably)
get added, books and comics get added—and sometimes it might even be a
vague matter whether something is canon (and hence indeterminate which
of many fictions ‘Star Wars’ refers to). When A New Hope was just released
and not yet a success (and so the existence of a sequel not ensured),
‘Star Wars’ referred to the fiction whose being is grounded in Lucas’s
interpretation of that one film; but later, the fictional universe expands,
and as it does the reference of ‘Star Wars’ shifts to encompass the bigger
fiction. That is why Johnny says something false and Jimmy says something
true despite uttering the same string of words: Johnny and Jimmy simply
refer to different fictions, since the fictional universe was expanded between
the times of their utterances. There is, and always will be, a fiction that does
not settle issues of Luke’s parentage—hence there is a fictional character that
is not, according to that fiction, Vader’s son; but as a result of Lucas’s
history and our own linguistic intentions, these are not the referents
of ‘Star Wars’ or ‘Luke Skywalker’.
What of the indeterminate identity case? What I want to say is that when
our interpretation suggests an indeterminacy in the identity of fictional
characters, both interpretations are (as a matter of contingent psychological
fact) forced upon us: we interpret things both ways, and hence there is
a fiction that has it one way and a fiction that has it the other, and there
is nothing that singles out one fiction over the other as being a better
candidate referent, and hence our terms purporting to refer to ‘the’ fiction
and the fictional characters belonging to that fiction are indeterminate
in reference, and so the puzzle is solved as suggested above. Now, that
literary practices. J.K. Rowling can intend Dumbledore to be gay all she wants, but that interpretation
really doesn’t seem mandated by the words on the pages of the Harry Potter books, and so it’s not
implausible to think that it’s simply not true that Dumbledore is gay according to Harry Potter, despite the
author’s intent.
In addition, there may be various normative facts about how I ought to interpret a fiction, or about
how I ought to interpret it given that I am aiming to engage with it as a work belonging to a certain genre,
etc.; and so insofar as I fail to meet these norms I can be said to be misinterpreting the work. I believe that
there are many such norms, although the current proposal is simply neutral on that.
HOW TO BE A NOMINALIST AND A FICTIONAL REALIST 195
might not always happen: perhaps in some cases there will be principled
reasons for one fiction being the referent over the other—and in such cases
we should be happy with the verdict that the characters are identical/
distinct, as determined by that fiction; but in the absence of such reasons,
we will be left with (an unproblematic) indeterminacy in the statement
expressing the identity of those characters.
There’s obviously much more that can be said about this proposal, but it
will have to wait. I hope to have done enough here to make plausible two
claims: (1) that we can be fictional realists, in the sense of taking at face value
claims concerning the existence of fictional characters, without abandoning
a nominalist ontology, provided we are happy to adopt a meta-ontology
whereby what matters is not what exists but what has to be invoked as truth
makers; and (2) that appealing to acts of interpretation as the truth makers for
claims concerning fictional beings not only allows us to uphold a nominalist
ontology but also provides an independently attractive solution to certain
puzzles concerning fictions and fictional characters.
References
Barnes, Elizabeth (2009) ‘Indeterminacy, Identity, and Counterparts: Evans
Reconsidered’ Synthese 168: 81–96
Breckenridge, Wylie and Magidor, Ofra (forthcoming) ‘Arbitrary Reference’
Philosophical Studies
Cameron, Ross (2008a) ‘There are No Things That are Musical Works’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 48: 295–314
——(2008b) ‘Truthmakers and Ontological Commitment: Or, How to Deal with
Complex Objects and Mathematical Ontology Without Getting into Trouble’
Philosophical Studies 140: 1–18
——(2010a) ‘How to Have a Radically Minimal Ontology’ Philosophical Studies
151: 249–64
——(2010b) ‘Vagueness and Naturalness’ Erkenntnis 72: 281–93
——(2010c) ‘Quantification, Naturalness and Ontology’ in Allan Hazlett (ed) New
Waves in Metaphysics (New York: Palgrave-Macmillan)
——(forthcoming) ‘Truthmakers’ in Michael Glanzberg (ed) The Oxford Handbook
of Truth (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Caplan, Ben and Matheson, C. (2006) ‘Defending Musical Perdurantism’ British
Journal of Aesthetics 46: 59–69
196 ROSS P. CAMERON
I. Introduction
Ontological theories of musical works fall into two broad classes, according
to whether or not they take musical works to be abstract objects of some
sort. I shall use the terms ‘Platonism’ and ‘nominalism’ to refer to these two
kinds of theory.1 In this chapter I first outline contemporary Platonism
about musical works—the theory that musical works are abstract objects.
I then consider reasons to be suspicious of such a view, motivating a
consideration of nominalist theories of musical works. I argue for two
conclusions: first, that there are no compelling reasons to be a nominalist
about musical works in particular, i.e. that nominalism about musical works
rests on arguments for thoroughgoing nominalism; and, second, that if
Platonism fails, fictionalism about musical works is to be preferred
to other nominalist ontologies of musical works. If you think in terms
of realism vs. anti-realism about musical works, then one way of putting
this is to say that realism about musical works stands or falls with Platonism
about musical works.2 That’s because, for methodological reasons I discuss
below, a theory according to which musical works are concrete objects of
some sort is not a realist theory of musical works, properly understood. This
* Thanks to Curtis Brown and Christy Mag Uidhir for helpful discussion of the issues addressed in
this chapter, and to Trinity University for financial support.
1 Nominalists about musical works may be Platonists about other entities, such as numbers (and, in
principle, vice versa). When I discuss a view according to which there are no abstract entities at all, I call
it ‘thoroughgoing nominalism’.
2 Thanks to Christy Mag Uidhir for bringing this perspective to my attention.
198 ANDREW KANIA
3 For the distinction between ‘fundamental’ and ‘higher-order’ musical ontology, see Kania 2008b.
There is some debate over how broadly we should construe ‘Western classical music’ if our aim is to
include musical practices centered around the performance of works. (Lydia Goehr 2007, especially chs
7–9) is well known for arguing for a narrow construal. For a defense of the more traditional broader
construal, see S. Davies 2001, pp. 86–91. I will not enter that debate here.
4 I have primarily in mind here the work of Nelson Goodman (1976 (first published 1968)); Richard
Wollheim (1980 (first published 1968)); and Nicholas Wolterstorff (1980).
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 199
Dodd (2007) has argued, pretty much exclusively on the basis of these two
features, that musical works are eternal, unstructured, unchanging, modally
inflexible, abstract types.5
But musical works have further, equally basic, features that do not allow
their ontology (or debates about it) to be assimilated to that of properties
so easily. For instance, (iii) musical works are intentionally created by
composers; (iv) they are normative, both in the sense that they specify
how their performances should go, and in the sense that they admit of
better and worse performances; and (v) they possess aesthetic or artistic
properties that seem to depend on the cultural context of their composition.
To hold that these latter features, and others like them, are relevant to the
ontology of music is to subscribe to a methodological principle held by
many ontologists of art over the last thirty years, a principle now widely
known, thanks to the work of David Davies, as ‘the pragmatic constraint’
(2004, p. 18). The principle is so-called not because of any connection with
the philosophical theories of Pierce, James, and Dewey, but because it takes
artistic practices to be the yardstick against which ontologies of art should be
measured. As Davies puts it:
Artworks must be entities that can bear the sorts of properties rightly ascribed
to what are termed ‘works’ in our reflective critical and appreciative practice; that
are individuated in the way such ‘works’ are or would be individuated, and that
have the modal properties that are reasonably ascribed to ‘works’, in that practice.
(2004, p. 18)
The basic rationale of the principle is simple, and familiar from other areas
of metaphysics: we ought to believe that those things exist which are
required by our best theories of how things are. When we ask ontological
questions about numbers we rightly take our best mathematical theories to
be our most important evidence base; when we ask ontological questions
about music, we rightly take our best musical theories to be our most
important evidence base. It is worth noting that ‘musical theories’ here
does not just mean music theory, narrowly construed, or even musicology
in a traditional sense. It is, rather, our best understanding of this entire
cultural sphere, of everything that goes on in the production and reception
of music, that is our evidence base for ontological claims about music. This
is because, to quote Davies once more:
[O]ur philosophical interest in ‘art’ and in ‘artworks’ is grounded precisely in
[artistic] practice. It is because certain features of that practice puzzle us, or because
the entities that enter into that practice fascinate us, that we are driven to
philosophical reflection about art in the first place. To offer an ‘ontology of art’
not subject to the pragmatic constraint would be to change the subject, rather than
answer the questions that motivate philosophical aesthetics. (2004, p. 21)
Davies has been criticized for making unjustified exclusions from this
evidence base. I, for one, have argued that Davies is led astray by not taking
seriously enough the ontological implications of our artistic practices,
including our ontological intuitions (Kania 2008a, pp. 429–32). In Art as
Performance, his ontological magnum opus, Davies claims that:
. . . in reflecting upon our artistic practice in this way, the intuitions that
are strongest will be those that relate to practical aspects of that practice . . . —
judgments made, ways in which entities are treated, etc.—rather than intuitions
about what works are, ontologically speaking. (2004, p. 22)
But either I misunderstood Davies or he has taken this criticism to heart, for
in a recent discussion of the pragmatic constraint, he says that he does not
‘deny that there are ontological dimensions to some aspects of our practice’,
though he notes that ‘these judgments, like other features of our artistic
practice, can constrain ontological theorizing only when subject to rational
reflection’ (2009, p. 163).6
Robert Stecker has recently argued for a further broadening of the
evidence base for musical ontology:
Of course we should look at our musical practices and linguistic usage, . . . but that
should only be a starting point. There are many sciences that study music, including
musicology, music theory, psychology, and anthropology. Why shouldn’t these
studies generate data that are just as valuable for the philosopher? (2009, p. 383)
6 Davies does not comment in this essay on whether this acknowledgement would impact his
arguments for his own ontology of the arts.
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 201
7 Stecker admits that his new suggestion’s ‘potential for providing better data for an ontology of music
is as yet unknown’ (2009, p. 384).
202 ANDREW KANIA
early on that his view is a (in fact the) ‘simple’ one, the ‘default’ view, given
the repeatability of works and their audibility in performances (2007, p. 1
et passim). But judgements of simplicity (to say nothing of default) are always
relative and contextual. Two prominent aspects of the way in which Dodd
motivates his view show that its simplicity depends on taking what
I have called the ‘metaphysical constraint’ at least as seriously as the
pragmatic constraint (Kania 2008a, pp. 434–8). According to the metaphysical
constraint, our ontological theories of art, as far as possible, ought to appeal
only to entities posited by our best general metaphysical theories.8 The fact
that in motivating his view Dodd considers only the two features of musical
works that make them seem most like simple properties is one sign that he
implicitly endorses the metaphysical constraint. If musical works must belong
to a well-established ontological category, then one promising approach is to
ask: Of those things investigated by general metaphysicians, which are most
like musical works? And ‘properties’ seems a plausible answer to this question.
The other, more explicit sign that Dodd subscribes to the metaphysical
constraint is the way in which he talks about types when he proposes them
as the best candidate for the ontological category to which musical works
belong. He claims that upon recognition that musical works are ‘generic
entities’, that is, repeatable:
[w]e are . . . invited to treat [them] as types because . . . we thereby provide a familiar
and plausible explanation of the nature of the relation holding between a work and
its occurrences . . . Rather than being a queer relation of embodiment, it turns out to
be just one more example of the familiar relation that holds, for instance, between
the word ‘table’ and its token inscriptions and utterances. (Dodd 2007, p. 11)
8 This characterization of the constraint is somewhat rough and ready, in part because those who
subscribe to it rarely do so explicitly. For an attempt at working out more explicitly the proper
relationship between the metaphysics of art and general metaphysics, from a perspective sympathetic
to the metaphysical constraint, see Mag Uidhir (this volume, Introduction).
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 203
9 e.g. Loux and Zimmerman (2003) and Le Poidevin, Simons, McGonigal, and Cameron (2009). For
the best consideration of Whitehead’s famous aphorism that I am aware of, see Lachs (1995).
10 Dodd spends five pages early in his book dismissing nominalism about musical works, employing
standard moves in the debate over universals. For responses to these moves, see Caplan and Matheson
(2006, 2008) and Tillman (2011).
204 ANDREW KANIA
11 See, in particular, Levinson (1990b, 1996, and this volume Ch. 2).
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 205
12 This literature is too extensive to summarize here, but for a recent example see Matheson and
Caplan (2008). They consider challenges to Levinsonian views on the basis of the modal flexibility of
musical works, and end up defending the plausibility of something very close to Levinson’s own view
(though they do not endorse the view).
206 ANDREW KANIA
Evnine has suggested that creation does not require causal interaction, in the
case of either concreta or abstracta (2009, pp. 214–15, esp. fn. 25).
What this suggests is that the nominalist’s motivation resides wholly
in quite general motivations for nominalism which are seldom, if ever,
engaged with. Perhaps it is too much to expect the nominalist about musical
works to provide arguments for nominalism in general. However, this does
mean that the nominalist’s case is built on a conditional: if there are no
abstracta, then musical works must be thus and so. This comes out pretty
explicitly in Chris Tillman’s consideration of various nominalist theories
of musical works: ‘If there is a presumption in favor of the material over
the abstract, and if the main motivation for musical materialism is that
materialism is untenable . . . , then musical abstractionism is unmotivated’
(2011, p. 28, emphasis removed).13 The nominalist might reply that the
Platonist’s case is similarly built on a conditional: if there are abstracta, then
musical works must be thus and so. However, the Platonist has the dialectical
advantage here, because, thanks to the pragmatic constraint, the ‘thus-and-so’
in the case of the Platonist is how we ordinarily conceive of musical works.
This means that (a) other things being equal, there’s a smaller cost to accepting
the antecedent of the Platonist’s conditional than the nominalist’s;14 and (b) it
gives us some (perhaps slight) reason to think there are abstracta. Nonetheless,
I doubt these brief reflections will do much to sway anyone already inclined
to thoroughgoing nominalism. I thus turn now to the ontological options
open to a thoroughgoing nominalist when it comes to musical works.
13 In the ellipsis, Tillman refers to the arguments typically marshalled against materialism, which
he finds wanting. He considers these arguments on pp. 20–8. The details do not affect the point I am
making here.
14 The ‘other things’ in this case are elements of the debate between thoroughgoing nominalists and
Platonists. Of course this debate may well not be equal, but part of my goal here is just to see how
ontologies of music relate to more general ontological theories.
208 ANDREW KANIA
15 Ben Caplan and Carl Matheson have defended musical perdurantism at some length (2004, 2006,
2008), primarily in dialogue with Julian Dodd (2002, 2004, 2007). You could even be forgiven for
thinking they subscribe to the view.
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 209
there aren’t really any musical works. The reason this isn’t a contradiction,
according to Cameron, is that the truth conditions of ordinary English
sentences such as ‘there are many musical works’ do not require that there
be any things which are musical works. On the other hand, when we
(truthfully) say things such as ‘there aren’t really any musical works’,
we are speaking ‘Ontologese’, the language of metaphysics or fundamental
reality. The truth conditions of sentences in Ontologese do require there to
be referents for terms like ‘musical work’. I have no space to discuss
Cameron’s view in depth, in part because it is a general ontological position,
out of which this theory of musical works falls.16 I do think it is unstable,
however, and threatens to collapse into Doddian Platonism, eliminativism,
or fictionalism, depending on which elements of the theory one holds most
firmly to.
According to both kinds of nominalist theory I have considered here—
materialism and eliminativism—there are no musical works of the kind
implied by our musical practices, since those practices imply that musical
works are abstract. The major difference between the two theories is that
the materialist sees the denial of the existence of musical works as a greater
theoretical cost than the eliminativist. Consider that, in some sense, the
materialist and eliminativist do not (or need not) disagree about the kinds of
things that exist.17 They both agree that there are no abstract objects (or,
at least, no abstract objects that are musical works). They do disagree about
whether there are any musical works, of course, but that is a disagreement
about whether musical works can plausibly be identified with some kind of
concrete entity, not about whether the kind of concrete entity in question
exists. Moreover, both these kinds of theory count it as a cost to deny the
existence of the kind of musical work implied by our musical practices. This
is evident in the case of the materialist by the use of the paraphrase strategy.
The materialist attempts to show that as many as possible of the claims we
make that at least appear to commit us to the existence of abstract musical
16 For some initial criticisms, see Stecker (2009, pp. 378–80) and Predelli (2009).
17 I supply the qualification because any given materialist and eliminativist may of course disagree
about the kind of things that exist. For instance, one may be a perdurantist and the other an endurantist,
in which case they would (arguably) disagree about the existence of temporal parts (on some construal of
that term). But this kind of disagreement is not relevant to the arguments I am currently considering. It is,
after all, a kind of disagreement two materialists could have. The only relevant disagreements here are
disagreements between the materialist and eliminativist qua materialist and eliminativist.
210 ANDREW KANIA
works can be paraphrased into claims that commit us only to concreta. This
saves us from some kind of error (e.g. the error of failing to refer to anything
when we attempt to refer to musical works), but attributes some other
error to us (e.g. not realizing what we are referring to).18 But it is also
evident in the case of the eliminativist, for the eliminativist does not
(or need not) deny the existence of the concreta with which the materialist
identifies musical works. Why, then, does the eliminativist not subscribe to
materialism? Presumably because the eliminativist thinks that it would
do less violence to musical practice to deny the existence of musical
works altogether than to identify them with the concreta the materialist
believes them to be. After all, eliminativism about musical works would
make no sense if the eliminativist did not believe both (1) that our concept
of a musical work is that of a certain kind of thing; and (2) that there are
no such things.
It is at this point that we see that the dispute between the materialist and
the eliminativist is doubly pragmatic: it is pragmatic in the sense that the
materialist and eliminativist agree about what kinds of things exist, but not
about whether to call one kind of thing a musical work. Choosing between
the theories depends on one’s purposes. The dispute is also pragmatic in
the sense that the pragmatic constraint appears to be implicit common
ground. The question the nominalist faces when choosing between
materialism and eliminativism is whether it would be better to give up
talk of musical works altogether or to transform it into talk of, say, fusions
of performances.19 And the measure of what is better here is clearly closeness
to, or coherence with, existing musical practices.
18 There may be disagreement among materialists about exactly which errors we are committing and
saved from.
19 It is the fact that this would be a transformation of musical discourse that leads me to say, as I did in
the introduction, that materialism about musical works is not realism about musical works.
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 211
20 Lydia Goehr is perhaps the best known fictionalist about music works (e.g. 2007, p. 106), though,
despite the title of the book in which she sets forth that theory, this aspect of it is not often commented
upon. Also, as I’ve just mentioned, Cameron’s arguments could be given a fictionalist spin, though he
would clearly rather you just left them alone.
21 I will not say much about what it is for a claim to be fictional, to adopt a fictional attitude towards a
proposition, and so on (likewise for assertion). For an introduction to these topics in connection with
fictionalism, and the literature on them, see Eklund (2007, Section 2) and Sainsbury (2010).
22 Matti Eklund claims that this makes fictionalism primarily a linguistic rather than an ontological
theory, albeit one that is usually motivated by ontological concerns (2007, Section 2.1). But the same
reasoning would suggest that materialism is primarily a linguistic thesis, when it is generally considered an
ontological theory. On the one hand, I think it would be misleading to think of fictionalism as a
linguistic thesis in contrast to the other kinds of theories I have been considering here. On the other
hand, I do think it is valuable to bring out the interconnection of linguistic and ontological matters, as
I have tried to do already in comparing materialism and eliminativism.
212 ANDREW KANIA
value, saying a lot of things that are false because they are about a realm of
entities that do not actually exist. He argues that enlightened mathemat-
icians ought to stop asserting such claims, and start making them fictionally
instead. He is thus a revolutionary fictionalist.23
What is the relevant discourse in the case of fictionalism about musical
works? It is musical discourse—precisely the discourse that gives rise
to questions about the ontology of musical works, and theories that purport
to answer those questions.24
What kind of fictionalist should you be about musical works?
I recommend revolutionary fictionalism. It seems implausible (to me) that
in ordinary musical discourse people are not committed to the existence of
musical works as distinct entities, that they are already speaking about them
fictionally. Application of the pragmatic constraint gives us our best theory
of the kind of thing people are referring to (or attempting to refer to) in such
discourse. If you don’t think there are any such things, and are tempted by
fictionalism, then you should think that people ought, when speaking
strictly, to adopt a fictional attitude towards them; that is, you should be a
revolutionary fictionalist.25
What is the value of musical discourse about works that justifies retaining
it despite its falsehood? It is the value of those musical practices that are
enmeshed with that discourse—practices (apparently) involving musical
works—whatever that value is. This raises a number of issues. The most
obvious is what the value of musical practices involving works is. I take it
that a large part of the answer to this question will be a general theory of the
value of music. I don’t have one to hand, but I take it as uncontroversial that
music is very valuable.26 One might, of course, argue that although music in
23 I am no great fan of these terms, since it’s not clear to me that revolutionary fictionalism is any more
disturbing to our usual way of thinking about what goes on in a domain of discourse than hermeneutic
fictionalism. But the terms are well established, so I will run with them. Note that materialists can also be
divided into hermeneutic and revolutionary camps, according to whether they claim the paraphrases
they provide for ontologically-committing claims supply what we actually mean by those claims, or what
we ought to mean by those claims.
24 As the pragmatic constraint suggests, I take non-linguistic behaviours to be relevant to our
interpretation of the discourse. I assume this is uncontroversial.
25 That said, whether you plump for hermeneutic or revolutionary fictionalism might depend on
other commitments you have in the philosophy of language. For further distinctions between varieties of
fictionalism, see Eklund (2007, Section 2).
26 For an introduction to theories of the value of music, see Goldman (2011); Gracyk (2011); and
S. Davies (2003).
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 213
general is valuable, musical practices involving the work concept are perni-
cious. One might even think that what is valuable about these practices
could be retained, and its perniciousness expunged, by reformulating
the practice (including its discourse) to eliminate the work concept.
I think this is implausible, but it is not too far from some views that have
actually been defended in musicology and philosophy of music.27 For
example, Lydia Goehr concludes that:
[i]n the end, musicians must just ask themselves whether the most satisfactory form
of musical criticism is one that is based on the ideal of Werktreue [faithfulness to
a work]. If it is not, they must seek an alternative. No musician is necessarily bound
to this ideal, however pervasive and persuasive the romantic aesthetic. (2007,
p. 279)
She explicitly leaves such questions open, but to do even this is clearly
far from a ringing endorsement of work-based musical practices. Lee B.
Brown (2011) also bemoans musical ontologists’ obsession with the work
concept, but he is more concerned that the obsession has led ontologists
to mischaracterize certain musical traditions, rather than that practices
involving the work concept are less valuable than they could be.
On the other hand, it is possible to construct an argument for precisely
the opposite conclusion: that musical practices involving works are more
valuable than those without the concept. The basic idea would be that
the works are enduring entities that thus admit of (i) being worked on over
time by their creators; and (ii) being appreciated on multiple occasions of
reception by their audiences. I doubt disagreement over these issues
will have much effect on musical practices, even in combination with
fictionalism. It seems unlikely we’ll reach a philosophical consensus about
the values of musical practices such that entire practices will be given up.
And, when it comes to fictionalism, it is practical matters—the value of
some discourse other than truth—that count. Anyway, if we did reach
a consensus about the values of music and this significantly affected
our musical practices, it would not make sense to bemoan the fact. If we
27 Of course, if we decided to get rid of the work concept altogether, due to its perniciousness, the
problem of the ontology of musical works would disappear, just as we are no longer concerned with the
nature of witches.
214 ANDREW KANIA
28 This dialectic might be taken even one step further: one might attempt a transcendental argument
that there must be a diversity of musical values since humanity cannot be wrong in pursuing the diversity
of musical practices it in fact pursues. But we’re now in uncomfortably deep waters.
29 The fictionalist about possible worlds is not (thereby) a fictionalist about modality tout court, just as
the fictionalist about musical works is not (thereby) a fictionalist about music tout court. Hence the
unsuitability of the labels ‘modal fictionalism’ and ‘musical fictionalism’, despite their appealing brevity
(Sainsbury 2010, pp. 179–80).
30 I choose fictionalism about possible worlds as my illustrative example because I am not so
convinced by Sainsbury’s arguments against moral fictionalism. Sainsbury argues that the moral fiction-
alist is also in a quandary about which story about moral values to choose, that she will end up choosing
the story that gives the results she antecedently believe in. But he grants that engaging with the moral
fiction might be useful for non-moral ends such as prudential self-interest. What he seems to reject is that
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 215
works is (or ought to be) a fiction, and that the practices it is enmeshed in are
valuable for reasons other than the acquisition of truths, there can be no
question about the legitimacy of the pragmatic constraint. The story we
should tell ourselves about musical works is the one implicit in our musical
practice.
Why should a contemporary nominalist about musical works prefer
fictionalism over materialism or eliminativism? As we saw at the end
of Section IV, what motivates the choice between different nominalist
theories of musical works is how closely each theory hews to existing
musical practices. Fictionalism has certain advantages here. It looks, at first
glance, as if we do not need to alter our musical practices at all. We
can continue to talk about musical works in just the ways we have always
talked about them.31 On closer inspection, however, there are a couple of
changes. First, and most significantly, the fictionalism I have recommended
is ‘revolutionary’ in that it recommends moving from a musical-works
discourse aimed at truth to a musical-works discourse aimed at whatever
the value is of practices involving such discourse. So though the practice,
including the discourse, may look the same on the surface, it will be
operating in a different way. What would in the past have been assertions
about musical works, for instance, ought really, according to the fictionalist,
to be put forward as make-believe. Second, as we have just seen, it is
conceivable that the fictionalist with a complete theory would recommend
that some practices be changed, in light of the value of musical
practices involving discourse about works. But this is not a consequence
of fictionalism in particular, since the change is due to the theory of musical
value, not the fictionalism. A Platonist about musical works with a theory
about the value of practices involving musical-works discourse could just as
easily suggest that certain musical practices ought to be changed.
It seems to me that the best response the materialist can give to this line of
reasoning is to press on the fact that, according to fictionalism, there are no
there will be any way for us (practically? psychologically? theoretically?) to neutrally evaluate moral
fictions for how well they achieve that end. That seems an unjustified assumption. To my mind, the
bigger problem for the moral fictionalist is how to avoid the charge that the end substituted for moral
value (e.g. prudential self-interest) is not being appealed to as exactly the kind of entity the moral
fictionalist was motivated by rejecting in the first place (i.e. an objective value).
31 I pass over the distinction between the messiness of actual musical practice and the cleaner theory
we achieve by a process of aiming at reflective equilibrium.
216 ANDREW KANIA
32 The fictionalist must also have some theory of empty names, which will allow them to explain how
the discourse can still be about musical works in some sense, just as we can talk about Zeus or Sherlock
Holmes. But everyone needs a theory of empty names.
33 The Oracle makes its first appearance in the fictionalism literature in Burgess and Rosen (1997, p. 3).
PLATONISM VS. NOMINALISM 217
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IV
Abstracta Across the Arts
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10
Reflections on the Metaphysics
of Sculpture
HUD HUDSON*
* For generous and insightful criticism and comments on an earlier draft, I thank Christy Mag Uidhir.
1 As noted in the opening sentence of the solitary essay devoted to the topic in The Oxford Handbook of
Aesthetics, ‘philosophy has not had a great deal to say about sculpture’ (Hopkins 2002, p. 572). Yet despite
the lack of any widely-endorsed or orthodox analysis, there certainly are a number of commonly shared,
informal preconceptions about sculpture, a handful of which I hope to challenge in the present chapter.
(I recommend Hopkins’s article as a particularly helpful introduction and guide to some of the
philosophical literature on sculpture.)
224 HUD HUDSON
2 The ‘we’ in this passage is primarily intended to pick out us non-specialists, for the tendency here
lamented is presumably rather less prominent in those who are familiar with the surprising developments
in sculpture over the last half-century (e.g. the minimalist sculpture of a Fred Sandback or the combines
of a Robert Rauschenburg).
3 Definitions or analyses are often hard to tell apart from generics in the literature on sculpture, and
rather than attributing to particular theorists the official theses in question, let it suffice to attribute to
them descriptions that have (I conjecture) contributed to the overly-narrow conception of sculpture
popular today. Accordingly, for the emphasis on the three-dimensionality of sculpture, see Carroll
(2008); Hopkins (2002); and Langer (1953). For the discussion of the significance of the visual and tactile
assessment of sculpture, see Carpenter (1960) and Read (1977). For the highlighting of the role of the
ambient space of sculpture, see Hegel (1975); Langer (1953); and Martin (1976). For special focus on the
representational function of sculpture and debates regarding just how sculptural representation works,
see Goodman (1976); Schier (1986); and Walton (1990).
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 225
5 This critique leaves open the suggestion that artworks may continue to be sorted in accordance with
some folk conception of dimensionality, but then the resulting categories will have less pull on us when it
comes to more rigorous analysis.
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 227
6 For examples of liquid sculpture see the brief-lived works of Shinichi Maruyama as well as
innumerable fountains, for an example of gas sculpture see Fujiko Nakaya’s Fog Sculpture, and for
examples of light sculpture see the works of Dan Flavin, James Turrell, and Waltraut Cooper.
7 The case presented in the next paragraph originally appeared in Hudson 2007. Also compare
Michael Heizer’s works, North East South West and Double Negative, as additional examples of the
theme to be explored in the text.
228 HUD HUDSON
8 The case has been made satisfactorily (in my judgment) in Casati and Varzi (1994).
9 On the perception of holes see Nelson and Palmer (2001) and Bertamini and Croucher (2003).
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 229
But first, a brief aside: The cases for consideration (from here on out)
become increasingly fantastical, and the best justification I can offer for
seriously advancing them is simply the reminder that I am not trying to
characterize historical and contemporary sculptures or to make predictions
about the probable features of the range of future sculptures, but rather to
evaluate the status of certain preconceptions about sculpture as an art
form—in particular, to investigate what appear to be popular candidates
for necessary conditions to be included in the proper philosophical analysis of
‘sculpture.’ Since analyses boldly lay down claims about what is necessary,
even foreign and fantastical thought experiments are appropriate tools of
assessment, so long as they satisfy the modest condition of being metaphys-
ically possible. In each case we may ask—‘If there were such a thing, a thing
conforming to the salient features of the case as presented, would it be a sculpture or
no?’ If our answer is positive, then putative necessary-conditions on sculp-
ture will be exposed as mere commonly shared characteristics of actual
pieces rather than essential features of the art form itself.
That said—allow me to introduce you to three (perhaps merely possible
yet) marvelous pieces: The Infinitesimal Dragon; The Medusa; and The Ecto-
plasm Griffin.
Suppose our ability to manipulate material objects outruns our ability to
perceive the products of those manipulations. That is, suppose we have the
capacity to produce objects that do indeed have their sculptural features as
the direct result of an artist’s successful sculptural attempts but that verifica-
tion that these intention-directed activities have been successfully executed
requires the use of some non-perceptual method. (Perhaps computer pro-
grams assist in making a series of imperceptible cuts in some immobilized
material and subsequent interaction with the environment reveals the
material has taken on the desired shape.) In any number of ways we can
infer relevant facts about the three-dimensional and solid shapes of our
careful manipulations, we can pinpoint their locations, we can trade them
on the open market, we can describe their features and display them with
exaggerated mock-ups—we just can’t see or touch them. The Infinitesimal
Dragon is a statue that may not quite live up to his name (but he’s awfully
close), for despite having several replicas of him large enough to admire and
to study, we simply have no direct perceptual access to him whatsoever; he
is simply too small for perceptual capacities as crude as ours to resolve or
distinguish.
230 HUD HUDSON
10 A possible response: Well, just as it is imperceptible to me, so too, it isn’t sculptural for me—that is,
the basic relation is sculptural for, there is no such thing as sculpture—full stop, and to be sculptural for entails
being perceptible to. Such a relativizing strategy seems extreme to me, but it is worth mentioning just the
same.
232 HUD HUDSON
14 The Menagerie contains many duplicates of every other statue, too, but the others weren’t relevant to
its christening.
234 HUD HUDSON
15 For discussion of Universalism, see Lewis (1986) and Hudson (2001, ch. 3, from which the next few
sentences in the text have been borrowed).
16 For discussion of DAUP, see Hudson (2001); van Inwagen (1981); and Zimmerman (1996).
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 235
rest of the object were cut away. Once again, then, on the assumption that
the block is itself occupying an extended region, any arbitrary subregion of
that region hosts an object too, and so there they are—all those objects with
the figures of lions, and tigers, and bears—occupying subregions of the
block prior to sculpting.
Second question—‘Are the figured objects in the block prior to sculpting also
statues prior to sculpting?’
It seems clear that the answer is ‘no,’ but there are at least two competing
explanations that disagree about why ‘no’ is the correct response—two
explanations that arise from two popular theories about how material
objects persist across time.
Endurantism is the view that an ordinary material object is not spread out in
time as it is in space and that it is composed of different spatial parts at different
times (rather than being composed of temporal parts across times). Persistence
across an interval of time is thus a matter of being located at the different times
in that interval (i.e. of being multilocated at a series of non-simultaneous three-
dimensional regions).17 On this metaphysics (assuming that there is, in fact, a
figured object in the block prior to sculpting) ‘being a statue’ is a temporary-
property or a phase-sortal of a material entity. That is, no new thing comes into
existence as the sculptor practices her art; instead, an already existing thing
comes to have a property it didn’t have before. Strictly speaking, then, on this
view the sculptor does not create a statue (in the sense of bringing into existence
a thing which is a statue) but she does create a statue (in the sense of bringing it
about that something which was formerly not a statue is now a statue).
Perdurantism is the view that an ordinary material object is spread out in
time just as it is in space and that it is composed of temporal parts as well as of
spatial parts. Persistence across an interval of time is thus a matter of being
partly present at the different times in that interval (i.e. of having different
temporal parts located at the different moments in that interval).18 On this
metaphysics (again assuming that there is a figured object in the block prior
to sculpting) ‘being a statue’ is not merely a phase-sortal of some material
objects, it is also a career-predicate of some material objects. That is, as the
material object in the block prior to sculpting continues to persist, many
new things—new temporal parts—are coming into existence. Moreover,
19 . . . which will presuppose a view according to which naturally occurring objects (such as pieces of
marble) can exemplify aesthetic properties (such as beauty) even if no one ever apprehends them, or
appreciates them, or even has any de re attitude whatsoever towards them.
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 237
20 For discussion on the first point see Cameron (this volume, Ch. 8). For discussion on the second see
Hazlett (this volume, Ch. 7).
238 HUD HUDSON
activities of the same artist, and which are called (in a variety of contexts) by
the same name.21 We acknowledge that none is privileged in the right way
and when pressed to identify a unique bearer for the name that we casually
use to pick out the several objects so unified, we resort to officially
bestowing the name as well as the status ‘artwork’ on the single, abstract
object that we believe is operative in such unification—the art-abstractum
which then becomes the official referent of Rodin’s ‘The Thinker.’
Again, I only intend to engage the reason exhibited in this bit of
speculative psychology above in favor of the abstractum thesis for cast
sculpture. That reason consists (i) of acknowledging pressure to select
exactly one referent for ‘The Thinker’; (ii) of conceding that there is no
non-arbitrary concrete candidate for the job; and (iii) of turning to the
world of abstracta to complete our task. Whereas I admit (ii), I suspect both
that the pressure in (i) is actually quite slight and that the world of abstracta
in (iii) is no more likely to produce a non-arbitrary candidate than is the
concrete world. A few brief words of explanation.
First, there was a rather large series of unnamed, intermediate, material
statues (of clay, of plaster, and—if the argument of Section III above was
correct—of holes) involved in the eventual production of the numerous,
original castings of The Thinker. The fact that these objects were merely
intermediate stages in producing further and more widely-displayed objects
should not interfere with the judgment that they were themselves statues;
after all, if Rodin were to have died shortly after his first thumbing of some
clay into that well-known shape, it is hard to believe that it would have
failed to qualify as a statue. If, however, these objects were in fact christened
(ignoring complications arising from the fact that the original title was The
Poet) the many items in this series presumably bore names that were simply
homonyms. The pressure to select exactly one referent for ‘The Thinker,’
then is a bit like the pressure to select exactly one precise hue for ‘candy-
apple red,’ a pressure that relaxes as soon as we remember that for a variety
of pragmatic reasons we can press a single name into heavy service.
Second, turning our attention to abstracta only makes the arbitrariness
problem worse. Amongst the material candidates we at least have potential
21 But what of the causal histories of the posthumous castings of The Thinker? A hard question, I’d say,
and related to the question of whether Tom Stoppard’s Guildenstern is the same fictional character as
Shakespeare’s Guildenstern.
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 239
tie-breaking features like ‘the first cast,’ or ‘the first exhibited cast,’ or ‘the
cast which best realized certain artistic intentions’ (whether anyone knows
which piece manifests that favored feature or not). But which abstract object
is the privileged unifier of the instances—which has any chance of being the
abstractum that uniquely deserves the name over its abstract rivals? Recall
that we granted (against the nominalist) that there was a Platonic heaven of
abstracta to choose from, but the problem is that even if we confine our
attention to some uncontroversial set of material instances, there are still
plenty (even infinitely many) abstract objects which do an equally good job
of unifying exactly the members of that set. Moreover, whereas the details
and particulars of the actual historical artistic process significantly reduce the
range of admissible candidates, there is nothing in that process which selects
from the (infinity of) remaining abstract candidates a solitary winner.
Moreover, we presumably couldn’t select just one if we sat down and
tried; the fine-grained differences between the competitors quickly outrun
our abilities to distinguish them from one another. We could, of course,
regard it as indeterminate just which abstract object does the trick, but then
we would have gained no real advantage of uniqueness by retreating from
the concrete world. Accordingly—barring other and more persuasive con-
siderations—I see no reason to deny the status of artwork to each of the
concrete instances and to honor their common origins and other similarities
with harmless homonyms.
References
Alexander, Samuel (1925/2000) Art and the Material reprinted in Collected Works of
Samuel Alexander (Bristol: Thoemmes Press)
Bertamini, Marco and Croucher, Camilla (2003) ‘The Shape of Holes’ Cognition
87: 33–54
Broad, C.D. (1923) Scientific Thought (London: Kegan Paul)
Carpenter, Rhys (1960) Greek Sculpture: A Critical Review (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press)
Carroll, Noël (2008) The Philosophy of Motion Pictures (Cambridge: Blackwell)
Casati, Roberto and Torrengo, Giuliano (2011) ‘The Not So Incredible Shrinking
Future’ Analysis 71: 1–5
Casati, Roberto and Varzi, Achille (1994) Holes and Other Superficialities (Cam-
bridge, MA: The MIT Press)
Earman, John (1989) World Enough and Space-Time (Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press)
Goodman, Nelson (1976) Languages of Art, 2nd edn (Indianapolis, IN: Hackett)
Hegel, Georg Wilhem Freiderich (1975) Hegel’s Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art,
vol 2, trans T.M. Knox (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Hopkins, Robert (2002) ‘Sculpture’ in Jerrold Levinson (ed) The Oxford Handbook
of Aesthetics (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 572–82
Hudson, Hud (2001) A Materialist Metaphysics of the Human Person (Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press)
—— (2006) The Metaphysics of Hyperspace (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
—— (2007) ‘Lesser Kinds Quartet’ The Monist 90: 333–48
—— (2011) ‘A Metaphysical Mix: Morphing, Mal, and Mining’ Philosophical
Perspectives, Vol. 25: Metaphysics (Cambridge: Blackwell)
—— (2012) ‘The Morphing Block and Diachronic Personal Identity’ in Personal
Identity: Complex or Simple? (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
REFLECTIONS ON THE METAPHYSICS OF SCULPTURE 241
Langer, Susanne (1953) Feeling and Form: A Theory of Art (New York: Charles
Scribner)
Lewis, David (1986) On the Plurality of Worlds (Cambridge: Blackwell)
Martin, F. David (1976) ‘The Autonomy of Sculpture’ Journal of Aesthetics and Art
Criticism 34: 273–86
McCall, Storrs (1994) A Model of the Universe: Space-Time, Probability, and Decision
(Oxford: Clarendon Press)
Nelson, Rolf and Palmer, Stephen (2001) ‘Of Holes and Wholes: The Perception
of Surrounded Regions’ Perception 30: 1213–26
Nerlich, Graham (1994) What Spacetime Explains (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press)
Read, Herbert (1977) The Art of Sculpture, 2nd edn (Princeton: Princeton University
Press)
Schier, Flint (1986) Deeper into Pictures: An Essay on Pictorial Representation (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press)
Sider, Ted (2001) Four-Dimensionalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Tooley, Michael (1997) Time, Tense and Causation (Oxford: Oxford University
Press)
van Inwagen, Peter (1981) ‘The Doctrine of Arbitrary Undetached Parts’ Pacific
Philosophical Quarterly 62: 123–37
——(1990) ‘Four-Dimensional Objects’ Noûs 24: 245–55
Walton, Kendall (1990) Mimesis as Make-Believe (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press)
Zimmerman, Dean (1996) ‘Could Extended Objects be Made Out of Simple Parts?
An Argument for “Atomless Gunk” ’ Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 56:
1–29
11
Installation Art and Performance:
A Shared Ontology
SHERRI IRVIN*
* Thanks are due to Allan Hazlett for discussion, and to Martin Montminy and Christy Mag Uidhir
for very helpful feedback on earlier versions. I am grateful to Senior Curator Peter Boswell of the Miami
Art Museum for information about works in the MAM collection.
1 Interview with Miami Art Museum Senior Curator Peter Boswell, July 2010.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 243
on the work, the displays may (or even must) vary dramatically from one
exhibition to the next. Moreover, people other than the artist often con-
struct the display: Curators, conservators, and assistants may imbue it with
aesthetically relevant features the artist did not choose.
The analogy between installation works and artworks for performance,
such as musical compositions, is thus easy to see: The artist specifies param-
eters for acceptable realizations, there is considerable variation among these
realizations, and aesthetically relevant aspects of the realizations are often
introduced by others.2 Should we, then, see installation artworks as analo-
gous to artworks for performance, applying the same modes of understand-
ing in both cases?
This chapter has three objectives. First, I argue that apprehending an
installation work is, in fact, similar to apprehending an artwork for perfo-
rmance: In each case, audiences must recognize a relationship between the
performance or display one encounters and the parameters expressed in the
underlying work. Second, I consider whether and under what circum-
stances realizations are also artworks in their own right.3 I argue that, in
both installation art and performance, a particular realization is sometimes
an artwork in its own right (even as it realizes another work).4 I offer criteria
for determining when this is the case. Application of these criteria will yield
the verdict that performances are sometimes artworks in their own right,
while displays of installation artworks rarely are. However, this is a contin-
gent matter that arises from the conventions of the respective art forms.
Third, I address ontological concerns about entities that are both abstract
and temporal, as many artworks are on my analysis.
To clarify my terminology: With respect to installation art, what we see
on a given occasion is the display, and many displays may be generated for a
single work. A display is to an installation work, then, as a particular
performance is to a work for performance. The installation artwork or
2 These similarities, as well as a number of differences, between time-based media installations and
musical works are discussed by Laurenson (2006).
3 My treatment of this topic is inspired by James Hamilton’s (2007) argument that every theatrical
performance is an artwork in its own right, and no theatrical performance is a realization of any other
work. I discuss Hamilton’s argument in Irvin (2009).
4 There are also performances, e.g. Keith Jarrett’s 1975 Köln Concert (as discussed by Davies 2011,
pp. 135–6), that are not realizations of any underlying work. On my view such cases, which I do not
discuss here, always come out as artworks in their own right.
244 SHERRI IRVIN
work for performance itself is the underlying work. Both displays and per-
formances are realizations of the underlying work.
I. Production (1980)
Let us begin with a case study. Liz Magor’s installation artwork Production
(1980) is made up of some 2,800 bricks that Magor produced four at a time
out of wet newspaper, using a manual press, which is also part of the work.
This labor-intensive process required weeks of full-time work. The bricks
are not attached to each other or numbered. The work had been exhibited in
several different configurations prior to acquisition by the National Gallery
of Canada, so the curator and Magor swapped diagrams and descriptions by
fax to work out details of the new display. One of Magor’s faxes begins:
Yes, there are a thousand different ways to do it. But there’s a notion or rule of
thumb that eliminates some of them and modifies the others. I like it best when the
bricks are trying to act architecturally—they’re trying to make a wall or a column or
something. The ultimate would be that they totally cover a wall, with no space at
the top, bottom or sides . . . But a partial wall is okay too.
The bricks were finally installed in a long wall about two meters high, with
the press positioned right of center, a few feet in front of the wall. On earlier
occasions the arrangement had been quite different: The bricks were once
used to construct two parallel walls, each eleven feet long and approximately
the same height as the artist, with just enough space between them to
accommodate the press and one brick-producing worker, who might
have been constructing her own prison cell.
The nature of this work not only allows but demands reconfiguration.
The work comments on the relation between the labor of production and
the creative task of construction; the laborer simply produces the units,
which may then be manipulated in a multitude of ways. Always to display
the bricks in the same way would be to obscure this fact and thereby to
undermine an important feature of the work. However, not all possible
configurations are appropriate: The bricks can’t be dumped in a heap.5
7 I do not hold that, in general, aesthetic merit is required for the constitution of a new artwork.
However, I hold that for a realization to be a work in its own right, it must be aesthetically distinctive.
Further discussion is found below.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 247
8 As I understand Mag Uidhir, his nominalist view of photographic and print ontology stems from the
assumption ‘that a particular print is in fact an artwork’ rather than an instance of an artwork (Mag Uidhir
2009, Section 2). While I believe it is sometimes true that a particular print is an artwork in its own right,
I do not regard the assumption as generally acceptable with regard to prints and, especially, photographs.
9 Satisfaction of the criteria is a matter of degree, with the consequence that some realizations may be
borderline cases of distinct artworks. I see no reason to be troubled by this.
248 SHERRI IRVIN
13 When a realization is derivative in the very strong sense I mean here, its structure is derived almost
exclusively from the underlying work itself or from another realization. This is not just a matter of
stylistic similarity.
250 SHERRI IRVIN
14 For discussion of a similar point in relation to the work of Louise Lawler, see Irvan (2012).
15 Note that mistakes (such as wrong notes in a performance) do not fall into this category, since they
are not the product of autonomous aesthetic decision.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 251
16 This is still another reason to reject the view of installation artworks as four-dimensional concreta in
space-time: not everything that happens to the stuff the artist made (if such there is) belongs to the
artwork proper.
252 SHERRI IRVIN
17 The obvious alternative is to think there are five distinct but interrelated works that, though they
share common elements, do not realize any common underlying work.
18 I am less concerned about modal flexibility, as discussed in (e.g.) Rohrbaugh (2003); I’m willing to
say, if necessary, that if the symphony had had one different note, it would have been a (subtly) different
symphony, rather than the same symphony with (subtly) different features.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 253
view that the work occupies all the space-time regions occupied by its atoms
(which may include performances as well as scores, recordings, and perhaps
even memories), but without being identical either to any particular atom
or to the fusion thereof. Instead, the work is ‘wholly located’ wherever one
of its atoms is, just as I am wholly located wherever my current time slice is.
How should we adjudicate among competing proposals about the nature
of the artwork? As David Davies (2004, ch. 1) and Amie Thomasson (2004)
have argued, our aim in identifying the artwork should be to identify the
entity that is relevant to our critical practice: That is, the entity that, to the
greatest degree possible, warrants or makes true the appropriate claims we
make about artworks in our practices of appreciation. The fusion of a work’s
performances is not the right sort of thing to satisfy this role. When we
critically appreciate a particular musical work, our aim is to assess the entity
that the composer has offered to us and that manifests the composer’s
achievement.19 But the fusion of performances may be deeply misleading
in this regard. If the work is performed only once, then on Caplan and
Matheson’s view, all there is to say about the work is what there is to say
about that performance. But this is incorrect: A single performance, espe-
cially a mediocre one, may reveal little of the underlying work’s potentiality
and brilliance. And given that, pace Nelson Goodman (1968), there can be
incorrect performances, a single performance may have features that actively
distort our understanding of the work.
Tillman’s endurantism fares a bit better, in part because Tillman admits
the possibility that scores, as well as performances, might be atoms of the
work.20 Attention to the score at least provides us access to aspects of the
work that performances might not reveal. But the work is not fully revealed
through any of its performances, so to say that it is wholly located where a
given performance is located is uninformative from a critical perspective. To
appreciate the work, it would be a mistake to focus exclusively on a
particular performance, or even on the collection of all actual performances.
Performances contain elements that do not belong to the work; and there
may be aspects of the work that are never revealed through performance.
Moreover, some explanation of why a particular performance counts as a
19 For argument, see Currie (1989, pp. 36–40) and Davies (2004, pp. 52ff).
20 An atom, in Tillman’s view, is an appropriate object of critical attention and, while not identical to
the work, can be seen as a stand-in for it.
254 SHERRI IRVIN
performance of the work is needed; and this explanation must appeal to the
performance’s satisfaction of the relevant parameters or norms.
Consider, as a simpler case, the philosophical work you are now reading.
In a sense, it is wholly located wherever one of its atoms (printings, digital
files) is: if the notation is correct, nothing is missing. Tillman’s endurantist
proposal thus does better by philosophy papers than it does by musical
works. But even here, there are complications. Even if every atom were
in the same font, the font would not belong to the paper itself.21 We don’t
get confused about this; implicit knowledge of the norms of this form of
discourse informs us that font is incidental. But this information cannot be
had simply by consulting atoms of the work.
Allan Hazlett (this volume, Ch. 7) offers another interesting proposal:
Perhaps a work like Magor’s Production is a token event including Magor’s
creation of the bricks and provision of instructions, and the bricks’ being
installed on various occasions. Hazlett’s proposal differs from perdurantism
and endurantism in that it does not construe the work as having atoms, but
instead treats Magor’s creation of the bricks and instructions, along with the
various displays, as constituting a single event extended over a period of years.
Objections that Tillman (2011) raises against perdurantism seem to apply
to Hazlett’s proposal as well: It makes the work out to be something that
may not be complete until long after the artist dies, and it makes it difficult
or impossible for a particular viewer to perceive the whole work. Perhaps
these consequences are not as unpalatable for installation artworks like
Magor’s as they are for musical works, though: We might think that
Magor has enlisted the museum as an agent in the completion of her
work, and a consequence is that the work evolves over time in a way that
does, in fact, limit the accessibility of its whole four-dimensional structure to
any given viewer. Nonetheless, in my view an account like Hazlett’s is not
consistent with appropriate critical practice regarding the work. The actual
displays may or may not do justice to the work itself; they may or may not
reveal the full potential of this set of objects and this set of instructions; they
may or may not comply fully with the instructions. There is an appropriate
object for critical attention here that is distinct from the particular installations:
21 I am not claiming that the font can never be integral to a work. Mark Danielewski’s 2000 novel
House of Leaves does have font and text configuration as integral to some of its passages. The point is that
the font will be integral in some cases and not in others, and atoms of the work, considered collectively or
separately, are not sufficient to determine which holds for a particular work.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 255
It is the entity that Magor created, which centrally involves a set of instruc-
tions for installation. The particular displays count as such partly by virtue
of the fact that they sufficiently comply with said instructions; the work
thus has a normative element that is not captured by identifying it as
an event.22
The ontological category I prefer for artworks is along the lines of the quasi-
abstract entity discussed by Barry Smith (2008). What kind of thing, Smith
asks, is a game of chess that players play without a board, simply by speaking the
descriptions of moves to each other and holding the state of the imaginary
board in memory? The chess game is not a thought or collection of thoughts;
those are representations of the game rather than the game itself. There doesn’t
seem to be any collection of stuff that could plausibly be identified with the
game; it is, to that extent, abstract. However, it also exists in time: It came into
being at a particular moment and will end at a subsequent moment. Moreover,
it can have realizations or occurrences: Someone listening to the players’ verbal
exchange could move pieces about on an actual chessboard to realize their
game, either during the conversation or later.
Quasi-abstract entities are abstract in two senses: In the sense of not being
concrete—not being physical objects or events—and often also in the sense
of being susceptible of instantiation. These two senses of abstraction are
linked. A particular concrete object or event cannot have (other) instances;
there can only be other concrete objects or events, or representations, that
resemble it in various ways. The normative, and thus non-concrete, ele-
ments of a quasi-abstract entity are precisely what allow it to have instances,
namely those objects or events that satisfy the norms.
Is it ontologically promiscuous to suggest that there is a quasi-abstract
entity, a game, that came into existence when two people interacted under
the right circumstances? Must one who holds such a view think that there
are magical processes by which—poof !—strange new things come into
existence and float around in a mysterious ontological realm through
which they engage in mysterious causal interactions with real (in our
realm) objects and events? I don’t think so. Amie Thomasson describes
22 I object on similar grounds to the view of installation artworks as concrete four-dimensional space-
time worms. In addition, many complex sculptural and installation artworks (e.g. the candy spills of Felix
Gonzalez-Torres and Jana Sterbak’s 1987 Vanitas: Flesh Dress for an Albino Anorectic) are physically
discontinuous; there is little or no physical material that survives from one display to another, though
(according to standard critical practice) the existence of these works is not discontinuous.
256 SHERRI IRVIN
23 Searle (1995, 2010) offers a related account of social facts. As Searle would acknowledge, the ability
of a specific interaction to give rise to a social fact depends on an extensive background of social
conventions and institutions. These, too, exist by virtue of a complex of actions that can ultimately be
explained in terms of ontologically unremarkable episodes of physical particles moving around this way
and that—or, if they can’t, then we will need a more exotic fundamental ontology to make sense of the
goings on in our world.
24 Ross Cameron (2008), in similar deflationary spirit, points out that the truth makers of claims about
abstract entities are perfectly ordinary: They are commonplace events and states of affairs that belong to
or depend on the ordinary realm of physical particles that move around this way and that. To say that
there is a recession, then, is not to commit oneself—poof!—to the coming into existence of a new
nugget in some special ontological realm. Cameron (this volume, Ch. 8) suggests that this sort of account
is compatible with nominalism: ‘What is important for the nominalist is that a world of concreta suffices
to ground all truths.’ If that is correct, then so much the better.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 257
25 For the application of such an account to other art forms, see Levinson (this volume, Ch. 2). It
would be consistent with Levinson’s position to see an installation artwork as a set of indicated
parameters for the construction of displays.
258 SHERRI IRVIN
simply specify that, say, a pile of hard candies in brightly colored wrappers
should be dumped in a heap in a corner of the gallery, or that the words A
WALL BUILT TO FACE THE LAND AND FACE THE WATER AT
THE LEVEL OF THE SEA should be inscribed some way or other so as to
be visible to the viewer.28 What the artist has done in each case is to supply
instructions or norms for creating a display; it’s just that in the painting case,
the act of articulating the instructions is inseparable from the act of creating a
canvas with particular features, since the most important instruction is that
this canvas be displayed.
I’m sympathetic to complaints about this sort of account. The suggestion
that works of painting are really sets of norms is radically at odds with the
commonsense idea that paintings are fundamentally physical entities. Be-
cause the norms associated with most paintings (‘hang it with the painted
surface facing away from the wall and the representational content shown
right-side up’) are so heavily convention bound that we tend to overlook
them, it’s common not to notice that painting has a normative element at
all; and it’s not clear that the appreciation of painting suffers when most
people’s grasp of its normative element remains implicit. Even when the
normative element is noticed, the physical aspect still seems to retain
primacy; the temptation, when we consider painting or sculpture in isol-
ation from other cases, is to think the artwork is a physical entity with some
normative features tacked on as an auxiliary.
For visual artworks, especially paintings, sculptures, and installation art-
works that are bound to particular physical material, an option is to say that
the work is a hybrid of physical and normative elements, with the physical
elements having primacy in some cases and the normative elements in
others. Notice, though, that this will be a difficult row to hoe when it
comes to works that do not involve any particular physical stuff: The display
may be a physical entity, but the underlying work is not bound to any
particular physical material, so it’s hard to understand in what sense it is even
a hybrid physical entity.29 And, of course, cashing musical works out as
physical/normative hybrids does not seem feasible.
28 These examples are drawn, respectively, from the candy spills of Felix Gonzalez-Torres and a 2008
work by Lawrence Weiner that is in the collection of the Miami Art Museum.
29 Consider, for instance, Tino Sehgal’s 2002 performance artwork This is propaganda. Sehgal supplied
only a verbal description of the work, with no supporting documentation, when Tate Modern acquired
the work. Tate employees made no notes about the work during meetings with the artist, though they
260 SHERRI IRVIN
V. Conclusion
I have argued that the creation of both installation artworks and artworks for
performance centrally involves the expression of parameters for realizations.
Grasping the underlying works in both art forms, then, is a matter of
grasping the parameters.
I offered an account of the criteria that determine whether a particular
realization is an artwork. These criteria allow that some performances may
be independent artworks, while displays of installation artworks typically are
not. This is largely due to contingent facts about the respective art forms:
Installation artworks are often designed to provide a minimum of latitude;
and even when latitude is permitted, the installers are expected to defer to
the artist’s aesthetic values. In the performing arts, the conventions are quite
different: The underlying work’s parameters typically vastly underdetermine
were permitted to make personal notes afterward; the latter may not be printed for circulation (van
Saaze, 2011). Though critical practice is clear that the work persists between performances, no physical
concretum is plausibly identified with it.
30 In Irvin 2008, I come out for the heterogeneous ontology.
INSTALLATION ART AND PERFORMANCE 261
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the Conservation of Contemporary Art’ workshop, Amsterdam
12
What Type of ‘Type’ is a Film?
DAVID DAVIES*
I.
What kind of thing is a film? What kind of thing is a photograph? Philoso-
phers pondering such matters have generally been moved by the following
sorts of considerations. To appreciate an artwork requires at least an experi-
ential engagement of some kind with an instance of that work, where the
latter is an entity that makes manifest to the receiver some or all of the
properties bearing upon its appreciation.1 In the case of a painting, we
require an experiential encounter with a particular physical object usually
located in a particular gallery or museum. This makes it plausible to identify
the work itself with that object or with some set of properties of that object.
With films and photographs, however, there seem to be many different
locations where, at a given time, we might experientially encounter an
instance of a work in the manner necessary for its appreciation. You may be
watching Citizen Kane, or looking at Stieglitz’s The Steerage, in Chicago at
the same moment that I am watching the same film, or viewing the same
photograph in London. In this respect, films and photographs seem to
* I wish to thank Christy Mag Uidhir for helpful comments on an earlier draft of this chapter. I also
wish to thank the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, whose support
facilitated the writing of this chapter.
1 ‘Some or all’ depending upon one’s views in the epistemology of art. For ‘aesthetic empiricists,’ all
properties bearing upon a work’s appreciation will be manifest in such an experiential engagement
unmediated by knowledge of a work’s provenance, save perhaps knowledge of the artistic category to
which it belongs, whereas for ‘contextualists’ access to the properties manifest in such an engagement is
necessary but not sufficient for proper appreciation of a work. On aesthetic empiricism and contextual-
ism, see Currie (1989, ch. 2) and Davies (2004, chs 2 and 3).
264 DAVID DAVIES
2 Obviously, since the experienceable properties of an object usually change over time, something
may be a strict instance of a work X at certain times but fail to be a strict instance of X at other times. To
say that a work X whose instances are objects admits of a plurality of strict instances is thus an abbreviated
way of saying that different objects may, at some time in their existence, fully qualify to play the
experiential role for X.
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 265
II.
Philosophical accounts of multiple artworks must explain what is often
termed their ‘repeatability,’ the defining fact that they can have distinct strict
instances. As Richard Wollheim (1980, pp. 75ff.) poses this question, in what
ways can an entity be ‘generic’ in the sense that it has a potential plurality of
‘elements’ falling under it? The members of a set, certainly, can be seen as
falling under the set, but sets are individuated extensionally: Any difference
in membership entails a difference in set. The Steerage, Citizen Kane, and
Bleak House, however, could surely have had more or fewer strict instances
than they actually have. Such reflections help to motivate the idea that
multiple artworks are types and their instances are tokens of those types.
The type/token distinction is familiar in everyday contexts. For example, if
I inscribe the letters ‘s-h-e-e-p’ three times on a clean blackboard and ask
how many words are on the blackboard, you can correctly answer both ‘3’
(there are three occurrences of word-tokens) and ‘1’ (there are occurrences of
only one word-type). The identity and nature of a type does not change as the
number of its tokens changes. In this respect, the type-token relation mirrors
the relation between a multiple artwork and its strict instances.
However, so some philosophers have claimed, if multiple artworks stand
to their strict instances in the relation of types to tokens, they are types of a
special sort. For they are generally taken to admit not only of strict instances
but also of other entities intimately related to them that play the ‘experien-
tial role’ with respect to these works while falling short of the requirements
for being strict instances. As noted above, we treat as performances of a
musical work not only musical events that meet all the requirements for
right performance, but also musical events containing at least some incorrect
notes. Similarly, a damaged print of Renoir’s La règle du jeu can still provide
an audience with a screening of the film, albeit a flawed one. Types or kinds
that admit in this way of both correct and incorrect tokens have been
termed ‘norm-kinds’ (Wolterstorff 1975, 1980) or ‘norm-types’ (Dodd
2007). Descriptive types, it is claimed, are individuated by the condition
that must be met by their tokens, norm-types by the condition that must be
met by their correct or properly formed tokens.
I said that imperfect performances of musical works and screenings of
films are nonetheless treated as being intimately related to the works in
266 DAVID DAVIES
question, as no less of the work than their strict counterparts. This contrasts
with how we customarily treat copies of paintings or works of carved
sculpture. With such singular artworks, copies, however faithful, are treated
as extrinsic to the work, the latter being taken to have a single strict instance
and no other entities that are ‘of ’ it in the sense that flawed performances or
screenings are taken to be ‘of ’ particular multiple works. This asymmetry in
treatment is noteworthy because it prescinds from the purely epistemological
considerations in terms of which we introduced the notions of ‘instance’ and
‘strict instance.’ A flawed print of a film may be less well suited than a very
good period copy of a painting to play the experiential role for their
respective works, for example. Yet the former is treated as being ‘of ’ the
work in the same sense as its strict instances, while the latter is not.
This aspect of our practice is symptomatic of what I have elsewhere
described (2010) as an equivocity in the (philosopher’s) notion of ‘instance.’
It is because flawed performances and screenings stand in a particular kind of
relation to the provenance of a work that they are treated as being ‘of ’ that
work in an intimate sense that is denied to copies of paintings because the
latter do not stand in this relation to provenance. Entities that stand in this
kind of provenential relation to a work may be termed its ‘provenential
instances,’ or ‘p-instances.’ Those things that are fully or partly qualified to
play the experiential role in the appreciation of a work, however, qualify as
instances on purely epistemic grounds—they are what we may term a
work’s ‘epistemic instances,’ or ‘e-instances.’ A work’s p-instances will
normally be among its e-instances, strict or flawed.3 But there is no prin-
cipled reason why a work, whether multiple or singular, cannot have
e-instances—and indeed strict e-instances—that lack the necessary causal
history to be among its p-instances.4 A text that is a strict p-instance of a
literary work, for example, may also be a strict e-instance of another work,
generated in a very different art-historical context, with which it shares its
text. We need not pursue here the implications of such considerations for
3 Normally, but not necessarily. A p-instance of a work of cast sculpture which has lost all of its detail
through erosion, for example, may no longer have any capacity to play the experiential role in the
appreciation of that work.
4 See my 2010 for an extended argument for this conclusion. My use of e-instance in this chapter is
broader than in my 2010 paper in that I here allow for both strict and flawed e-instances. This is a
terminological rather than a substantial difference however, and reflects the different concerns of the two
papers.
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 267
5 Dodd argues that the alternative option—that properties exist atemporally—raises additional prob-
lems about how things existing in time can possess such properties.
268 DAVID DAVIES
For some (Dodd 2007, ch. 5), this consequence of identifying multiple
artworks with types simply shows that we must revise our intuitions about
artworks in light of sober metaphysical reflection. If, however, we wish to
reconcile the idea that multiple artworks are types with their creatability,
one option is to appeal to the normative element in such works if we
construe them as norm-types. For example, it can be argued that, while
types of sound sequence may themselves exist eternally, musical creation is a
matter of making a particular type of sound-sequence normative for a work,
and this brings into being something that did not exist prior to the com-
poser’s creative activity—namely, the eternal sound-structure type made
normative for a work by an individual at a time. Musical works can then be
thought of as ‘initiated types’ created by their composers (Levinson 1980; for
related proposals, see Lamarque 2010, Wolterstorff 1975, and (in a more
sceptical vein) S. Davies 2003, p. 170). But, if works are types, whether
initiated or not, then, if Dodd is right about the individuation and existence
conditions for types, they must still be individuated in terms of a condition
for (correct) instantiation expressible as a property: The property of being
correctly instantiated only by performances that fully comply with the
performance specifications set out by B in context C and that stand in an
appropriate intentional-historical relation to that act of specification, for
example. But then this property, like every property, must exist eternally if
at all, so we have not shown that multiple works, as norm-types, are
creatable (see Dodd 2007, ch. 5).
But both Dodd’s conception of musical works as eternally existing norm-
types and Levinson’s conception of such works as ‘initiated’ types are highly
counterintuitive if extended to other kinds of multiple artworks, such as
films and photographs. For, so extended, each conception entails that the
audio-visual structure of a film and the visual structure of a photograph
preexists its ‘making’ and is discovered by its makers. To see why this is so
counterintuitive, we need to consider certain significant differences be-
tween multiple art forms, and, of more significance in the present context,
between film and photography, on the one hand, and music and literature
on the other.
I shall use ‘initiate’ as a neutral term that applies across the arts and carries
no commitment as to whether initiation is creation or discovery. As a
number of writers have noted, there are at least three ways in which
multiple artworks can be initiated (S. Davies 2003, pp. 159–63; Wollheim
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 269
1980, pp. 78–80; Wolterstorff 1980, pp. 90ff.). First, as in the case of literary
works, an artist may bring into existence an instance of the work which
serves as an exemplar. Further instances are then generated through emu-
lating the exemplar in those respects required by relevant artistic conven-
tions in place. Second, as in the case of cast sculpture, an artist may produce
an artefact that, when employed in prescribed ways, generates instances of
the work. This may be termed a ‘production-artefact’ (Wolterstorff 1980).
As in the case of exemplars, further conventions in place in the relevant art
form determine how this artefact must be used if a strict instance is to be
produced. Third, as in the case of classical musical works, an artist may
provide instructions that, if properly followed by those aware of the relevant
conventions and practices, result in strict instances of the work. In such
cases, the instructions call for interpretation, and instances of the work (strict
or flawed) are performances of it.
Photographs and films clearly fall into the second of these categories. An
analogue camera registers light rays entering through its lens as photochem-
ical changes on a strip of film, while a digital camera records, stores, and
digitizes the values of the light levels. While the trace produced photo-
chemically by a standard analogue camera is a negative, the trace produced
by a digital camera is a bitmap. In each case this trace serves as, or is
manipulated to produce, the production-artefact appropriate employment
of which generates those prints or digital images that are p-instances of the
work. Films, on the other hand, have as their production-artefacts those
entities used, in various cinematic media, to generate screenings of those
films—film prints, videotapes, digital files, etc., which either are, or stand in
a ‘copy’ relation to, master encodings of the film.
The inclination to see initiation as creation is strongest in the case of
multiple artworks whose initiation involves a production-artefact. Con-
sider, for example, Rodin’s The Thinker. Rodin conceived the idea for a
sculptural work having certain perceptible properties. He chose to physi-
cally realize the work not by working directly on a sculptable material
selected as the medium for the piece, but by working first on another
kind of physical material which was manipulated to produce a cast which
then, in its turn, was employed (1902) to produce a p-instance of the work.
A number of other p-instances were cast later. Since the work is multiple,
the sort of reasoning rehearsed above with respect to music seems to
commit us to thinking of the work as an eternally existing abstract object,
270 DAVID DAVIES
a type of which its p-instances are tokens. But, if we reason in this way,
then, surprisingly, the decision by Rodin to employ a more indirect method
for generating instances of his piece entails that, whereas a visually indistin-
guishable work of carved sculpture would presumably have been his cre-
ation,6 The Thinker is his discovery, albeit, as Dodd might insist, one that
involved great creativity. Counterfactual situations pose further difficulties.
Suppose Rodin intended to smash the cast immediately after the first
casting, and indeed did so. Because it was still in principle possible for the
work to have multiple strict p-instances—someone could have frustrated
Rodin’s intentions by preserving the cast and casting a second copy of the
sculpture—should we say that the work is multiple, and a discovery, even
though Rodin merely intended to produce a singular work by a more
roundabout causal process? Again, should we say that, once we move
from the daguerreotype to the multiply instantiable calotype, photographs
are no longer created by their makers but discovered, so that, while
Daguerre and Fox Talbot were producing photographic images at the
same time—images that in each case can be viewed as instantiating a type
of visual manifold—the former was creating his images whereas the latter
was discovering his? There is surely something deeply counterintuitive
about this. How could the decision to employ not one kind of causal-
mechanical process, which permits only a single p-instance of the work,
but another equally causal-mechanical process, which permits multiple
p-instances, carry such consequences for the status of the artist as creator?
There is a further problem (Rohrbaugh 2003). Strict p-instances of
multiple works generally admit of artistically relevant variations. For
example, there is no single way in which a given musical work sounds
when correctly performed. However, because of the role that sets of
instructions play in initiating a musical work, the Doddian-type theorist
can identify a condition that all correct performances must satisfy, a condi-
tion that defines the type that is the work. Photographic works also admit of
such variation, having correct instances (prints) that differ in such artistically
relevant properties as tonal contrast, print medium, and size. There is
6 This presupposes that paintings and works of carved sculpture are properly seen as particulars rather
than as types. As Dodd notes, it is possible to reject this presupposition. Another alternative would be to
view paintings and works of carved sculpture as ‘logically proper types’ that are capable of having only
one token. I am grateful to Juhani Yli-Vakkuri for pointing out these possible options for type-token
theorists, albeit ones that Dodd does not take up.
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 271
III.
One might respond by taking the creatability of multiple artworks such as
photographs as given. If types indeed exist eternally and cannot therefore be
created, this shows that such artworks cannot in fact be types. The challenge
then is to say how an artwork can be repeatable if it isn’t a type. Guy
Rohrbaugh (2003) identifies three features which, so he argues, are
common to multiple artworks like photographs and non-multiple artworks
like paintings: (a) modal flexibility—a work could have had different
intrinsic properties; (b) temporal flexibility—a work’s intrinsic properties
can change over time; and (c) temporality—a work comes into and goes out
of existence. Since types, as characterized by Dodd, lack all three of these
features, Rohrbaugh concludes that multiple artworks cannot be types.
What can possess all three of these features and also be repeatable, Rohr-
baugh maintains, are continuants—essentially historical individuals that
depend for their existence on those concrete entities that are their embodi-
ments: ‘Photographs are non-physical, historical individuals, continuants,
which stand in a relation of ontological dependence to a causally-connected
series of physical (sometimes mental) particulars’ (2003, p. 198). Among a
photograph’s embodiments are its occurrences which are distinguished from
other embodiments, such as the negative, in that they ‘display the qualities
of the work of art and are relevant to appreciation and criticism’ (ibid.). It is
in virtue of its capacity for multiple occurrences that a photograph is
repeatable. A similar account is proposed not only for films but also for
musical works.
Some have questioned Rohrbaugh’s account on the grounds that con-
tinuants themselves are somewhat strange beasts (see Dodd 2007, ch. 6).
More crucially in the present context, however, the argument for the
continuant status of photographs depends upon the assumption that photo-
graphs are modally and temporally flexible, and the further assumption that
272 DAVID DAVIES
these are properties that continuants, as historical individuals, but not types,
can possess. The claim that multiple artworks are creatable, then, is hostage
to the claim that they are modally and temporally flexible. But the latter
claim is far from obvious. Dodd, for example (2007, pp. 87–90), argues that
there are no good reasons to think of musical works as either modally or
temporally flexible. Any locutions that might tempt us to think otherwise
are, Dodd claims, most plausibly understood in terms of suitable para-
phrases. Where a work W* differs in its intrinsic properties, either modally
or through time, from a work W, or from a work W at a time t, then we
should view W* and W as distinct works, albeit distinct works that closely
resemble one another, he maintains. While this doesn’t by itself show that at
least some multiple artworks are modally and temporally inflexible, it raises
questions as to the force of Rohrbaugh’s claims to the contrary.
Indeed, Rohrbaugh’s argument for the modal and temporal flexibility of
photographs can be challenged on independent grounds. He begins with
paintings. The latter, he maintains, are physical objects which are them-
selves continuants. As physical objects, they retain their identity even when
they vary in what might intuitively (but incorrectly, according to Rohr-
baugh) be regard as intrinsic properties of paintings. Picasso’s Les Demoiselles
d’Avignon, for example, could have had a different appearance had Picasso so
chosen, and can change over time because the physical object identical to
the painting can itself change over time through natural processes of
material transformation or through damage. And if paintings are temporally
and modally flexible, theoretical unity, Rohrbaugh maintains, supports the
idea that we should say the same about photographs.
This argument is open to at least two objections, however. First, as Dodd
points out (2007, pp. 151–2), to assume theoretical unity is to beg the
question against the type theorist, for whom paintings and multiple artworks
belong to completely different ontological categories. Second, more seri-
ously, it can be argued that paintings cannot be identical to physical objects,
as Rohrbaugh maintains, precisely because the latter stand in flexible relations
to what are usually regarded as intrinsic properties of paintings. Consider a
strategy used in metaphysical debates about the relation between an artwork
like a statue and the physical material of which it is composed. Some have
argued (e.g. Thompson 1998) that this relation is material constitution, not
identity, on the grounds that the statue and the lump of clay have different
persistence and existence conditions. If a clay finger on the statue is replaced
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 273
with a different but visibly indistinguishable piece of clay, the statue, but not
the lump of clay, survives the replacement, it is claimed. Similarly, if we heat
the lump of clay making up the statue at a given time and reform it into a
different shape, the lump of clay survives this process but not the statue.
Such thought experiments purportedly demonstrate that the material of
which the statue is composed at any given time is merely constitutive of it at
that time, whereas the shape of the statue is essential to it.
In claiming that paintings are physical objects which are themselves
continuants, Rohrbaugh is assuming, in a similar vein, that a physical object
is not identical with the material of which it is composed at a given time.
But, even if neither a painting nor the physical object with which it might
be identified can be identical to a given collection of matter, the painting
and the physical object may themselves differ in ways analogous to the statue
and the lump of clay. David Wiggins (1980), for example, maintains that a
painting’s intrinsic ‘pictorial’ properties are essential to it qua painting. But it
is precisely these kinds of properties of the physical canvas that can change
over time as a result of damage or deterioration. If such pictorial properties
are essential to the painting but not to the physical canvas, then paintings
cannot be identical to physical objects. Thus there are strong (to some)
intuitions about the temporal and/or modal inflexibility of paintings that
would, if granted, defeat the proposed identity of paintings with physical
objects. So one cannot assume that paintings are identical to physical objects
in arguing for the temporal and modal flexibility of paintings, or, deriva-
tively, for the modal and temporal flexibility of photographs.
IV.
Given the general constraints on an ontology of multiple artworks like films
and photographs to which I have appealed in the foregoing reflections, the
challenge is to find an account of such works that allows them to be both (1)
repeatable and (2) creatable. We should prefer an account that does not rest
upon contestable claims about the modal and temporal flexibility of works.
Indeed, claims about such matters should arguably be resolved on the basis of
an otherwise adequate account of the nature of multiple artworks, rather
than serve as premises in formulating such an account. We might, however,
274 DAVID DAVIES
7 Dodd (2007, p. 109, fn 12). Dodd, critically discussing Rohrbaugh’s arguments against the type-
token theory of musical works, entertains the supposition that ‘the repeatability of photographs—that is,
the fact that they admit of multiple copies (in the form of prints) . . . indicate[s] that photographs are
types.’ He comments in the footnote: ‘This is a big supposition, of course, and one to which I do not
wish to commit myself. After all, it is possible that the kinds of arguments that lead us to view works of
music as types do not apply in the case of photographs, or that there are special reasons why the
repeatability of photographs is best explained by a rival to the type-token theory.’
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 275
about types of the sort criticized by Dodd (2007, pp. 38–41). Wollheim’s
claim is not that statements that use type-expressions are ‘translatable’ into
statements about those particulars that are tokens of the type. Rather, for
Wollheim, to postulate a type is to postulate a particular kind of principle for
grouping particulars that relates them to an act of human invention taking
place within a practice. This enables us to clarify the ‘of ’ locution whereby
we describe the relation that obtains between a multiple work like a film or
photograph and its p-instances. The latter is to be compared with other
locutions in terms of which we group particulars by reference to the
relations in which they stand to acts of human invention. Consider, for
example, the locution ‘copy of this Sunday’s Observer.’ What I am reading is
such a copy because it has certain properties as a result of being produced by
a causal process using a production artefact that is itself the result of a
collective act of human creation. Those things correctly described as ‘copies
of this Sunday’s Observer’ are grouped under this label not merely in virtue
of their manifest properties but also in terms of the histories of making
whereby they came to have those properties.
V.
It might seem, however, that we have simple postponed the ontological
question about multiple artworks. If Citizen Kane, as a Wollheimian type, is
indeed something postulated in virtue of the way in which we group
particular screenings by reference to a piece of human invention, what
kind of thing is it, ontologically speaking, that we postulate? It is here that
we see the temptation to reify types through the kind of analysis furnished
by Dodd. Wollheimian types, it might seem, must be entities that somehow
stand apart from their tokens, and that explain why those tokens are
rightly grouped together. It is instructive, here, to see how Wollheim’s
logical conception of types mutates into the ontological conception in
Wolterstorff and Dodd. Wolterstorff introduces norm-kinds, as a corrective
to Wollheim’s talk of ‘types,’ by analogy with natural kinds such as ‘The
Polar Bear.’ Natural kinds, he assumes, are associated with a set of manifest
properties possessed by well-formed, but not necessarily by all, members of
the kind. This funds the idea that it is through possessing certain properties,
278 DAVID DAVIES
8 Varnedoe takes such a ‘fine disregard’ to be a mark of modernism, although it surely also applies to
much premodern art. If there are cultures of artistic production that are usefully thought of on the ‘chess’
analogy, such as French neoclassical drama, they cannot furnish a general model for thinking about how
artworks are initiated.
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 281
VI.
How, then, if not in terms of Doddian types, might we illuminate the nature
of what is postulated when, in identifying a work, we postulate a Wollhei-
mian type? The answer, I suggest, is that we illuminate what is postulated by
attending to the precise combination of human invention and an enabling
practice that does explain and legitimate9 both the groupings of certain
things as p-instances of a work and the identification of the properties
required in its strict instances. To postulate a work qua Wollheimian type
is to postulate a piece of human invention ‘initiating’ the work that is embedded
in a set of practices that issue in the very groupings of tokens that we seek to
understand. To appreciate works as such Wollheimian types is just to
appreciate what was done in two senses—what manifest properties are pos-
sessed by right tokens having the relevant causal history, and what was done
in establishing the preconditions (for example, the generation of a produc-
tion-artefact) for that casual history to take place.
On such a view, our understanding of works as Wollheimian types is not
illuminated by appeal to types in the metaphysical sense. Rather, the things
that play the particular kind of logical role described by Wollheim might be
viewed as what I have elsewhere (2004) termed ‘performances,’ contextual-
ized actions. On the ‘performance theory,’ Citizen Kane is a collective
generative action that brings into existence a production artefact whose
function is to enable multiple screenings of the work. A correct screening is
one that has those distinctive manifest features required by norms embodied
in the relevant artistic practice in virtue of standing in a causal relation to the
work, qua generative process, mediated by the production artefact. I have
argued for the performance theory elsewhere, and shall not repeat those
arguments here. My claim is only that multiple works, viewed as perfor-
mances, can play precisely the role for which Wollheimian types are
postulated, and can, unlike Doddian types, accommodate both the repeat-
ability and the creatability of multiple works. By rescuing Wollheim’s
neglected insights from the misunderstandings of Doddian-type theorists,
9 While I lack the space to develop this further here, I think my talk of groupings being ‘legitimated’
by our practices can be cashed out in terms of the more general model of the embeddedness of norms in
social practice spelled out by Robert Brandom (1994).
WHAT TYPE OF ‘TYPE’ IS A FILM? 283
References
Brandom, Robert (1994) Making It Explicit (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press)
Brown, James Robert (1991) The Laboratory of the Mind: Thought Experiments in the
Natural Sciences (London: Routledge)
Burgess, John and Rosen, Gideon (1997) A Subject With No Object (Oxford:
Clarendon Press)
Carroll, Noël (1998) A Philosophy of Mass Art (Oxford: Clarendon Press)
Currie, Gregory (1989) An Ontology of Art (London: St Martin’s Press)
Davies, David (2004) Art as Performance (Oxford: Blackwell)
——(2010) ‘Multiple Instances and Multiple “Instances”’ British Journal of Aesthetics
50: 411–26
Davies, Stephen (2003) ‘Ontology of Art’ in Jerrold Levinson (ed) Oxford Handbook
of Aesthetics (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Dodd, Julian (2007) Works of Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Lamarque, Peter (2010) Work and Object (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Levinson, Jerrold (1980) ‘What a Musical Work Is’ Journal of Philosophy 77: 5–28
Rohrbaugh, Guy (2003) ‘Artworks as Historical Individuals’ European Journal of
Philosophy 11: 177–205
Thompson, Judith Jarvis (1998) ‘The Statue and the Clay’ Noûs 32: 149–73
Varnedoe, Kirk (1989) A Fine Disregard (London: Thames & Hudson)
Wiggins, David (1980) Sameness and Substance (Oxford: Basil Blackwell)
Wollheim, Richard (1980) Art and its Objects, 2nd edn (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press)
Wolterstorff, Nicholas (1975) ‘Toward an Ontology of Art Works’ Noûs 9: 115–42
——(1980) Works and Worlds of Art (Oxford: Clarendon Press)
13
Musical Works: A Mash-Up
JOSEPH G. MOORE*
I. Controversing
What role in the individuation of a musical work is played by its prove-
nance—by the musico-historical and biographical conditions that sur-
round the work’s composition and reception? The fact that Beethoven’s
Hammerklavier Piano Sonata (No. 29 in B flat major, Op. 106, 1818)
occurred in the musico-historical setting that it did, and the fact that it was
composed when it was in the sequence of Beethoven’s oeuvre determines
some of the sonata’s broadly aesthetic features. The Hammerklavier estab-
lished a new precedent for the length of a solo work, for example; and
certain features of Beethoven’s later work, such as situating the fugue
within a classical form, emerge here for the first time. It’s natural to
attribute these novelties to the work itself, since they contribute to the
piece’s critical importance.
On the other hand, even a highly informed listener doesn’t encounter
these features in a narrowly perceptual way when the work is performed,
nor do they guide a proper or even insightful performance of the work. And
if a musical work is individuated by those of its features that can be presented
and experienced in performance then provenance shouldn’t figure in the
work’s identity.
* For help with this chapter, I thank Bradley Armour-Garb, Richard Beaudoin, Thomas Bennigson,
Mark Crimmins, Stephen Davies, James Harold, Christy Mag Uidhir, Stephen Maitzen, Lisa Moore,
Margaret Moore, Robert Pasnau, Dave Robb, Nishi Shah, and Thomas Wartenberg, as well as
audiences at the University at Albany, the Eastern Division Meeting of the American Society of
Aesthetics, and the Philoso-Ski Conference in Boulder, Colorado.
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 285
But perhaps this illegitimately privileges those aesthetic features that are
narrowly experiential, and these are sometimes of secondary evaluative
importance (think of chance music, or the use of found sounds). In any
case, it’s not clear that we can cleanly distinguish those aesthetic properties
of a work that can be heard in performance from those that can’t. Who
would deny that The Rite of Spring’s revolutionary character was apparent to
its first audience in Paris? (If you think Nijinsky’s choreography was really
the focus, consider instead the reception given to Ornette Coleman’s The
Shape of Jazz to Come.) Isn’t this striking historical property part of the
work’s very nature?
1 The debate concerning musical works was notably sharpened by an exchange between Jerrold
Levinson and Peter Kivy begun in the 1980s. See Kivy (1983, 1987) and Levinson (1980, 1990). For more
recent discussion see, for example, Davies (2001) and Dodd (2007).
2 For my purposes, we can take sound structures to be abstract rhythmically articulated sequences of
sound types. However, see Davies (2001, 2008), for a thorough discussion, and reasons why we might
include in sound structures not just timbre, but instrumentation. I’ll say a good deal more about
provenance below.
286 JOSEPH G. MOORE
3 See 2001, p. 97. Although Davies is not out to define musical works, I invoke his ‘suggestion’
because I think it sensibly incorporates Levinson’s inclusion of performance-means, while relaxing the
inclusion of ‘individual,’ as opposed to less restrictive ‘general,’ bits of musico-historical context. (See
Levinson (1980) for this distinction.) Davies’s proposal also incorporates, as Levinson eventually did (see
1990, p. 260), the normativity from Wolterstroff ’s (1980) influential idea that musical works are best seen
as ‘norm kinds.’
4 A note on labels: I use ‘structuralism’ even though neither Kivy nor Dodd apply this label to their
views. My use is meant to be neutral on the disagreement, alluded to above, over whether sound
structures should incorporate such features as timbre, instrumentation, or performance-means more
generally. As I’ve set things up, shiftism is technically a form of contextualism, since it incorporates
provenance in some manner in its account of work identity. But in the interest of clean contrasts and
clarity I’ll henceforth restrict ‘contextualism’ to fine-grained conjunctive proposals like those of Levin-
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 287
view gives a better treatment of some hypothetical and actual cases of work
individuation because it explains some unsettled intuitions. And in
Section IV, I argue that considerations that might sharpen this indetermi-
nacy are either tangential or inconclusive, particularly once shiftism is seen
as a theoretical alternative. I then worry, in Section V, that the individuative
indeterminacy that shiftism exposes challenges the existence of musical
works. However, in Sections VI and VII, I develop a more detailed account
of the indeterminacy that I argue, in Section VIII, is compatible with
realism about musical works.
III. Intuition-Mongering
Hypothetical cases are sometimes treated as grist for a theoretical mill, or
presented along with a favored intuition that the theory goes on to honor.
For the moment, I’d like to effect the opposite: Insofar as it’s possible,
consider the following counterfactual scenarios—my own versions of
some familiar examples—with an open, uncommitted, and pre-theoretic
mind.
Scenario #1: The Hawaiian-Hammer. Suppose Beethoven had lived in
some remote part of Hawaii, as yet untouched by the culture of Captain
Cook. In 1817, a Broadwood piano washes ashore. The Hawaiian genius
soon figures out how to play and compose for it, and to do all of this in
classical style no less. Even more miraculously he does so all on his own. By
the fall of the next year, he has composed a piece that is note-for-note
identical to the actual Hammerklavier. Is the Hawaiian-Hammer the same
as the actual Hammerklavier?5
Scenario #2: The Honey-Hammer. Suppose instead that, back in
Vienna, Beethoven sits down to write his 29th piano sonata during the
son and Davies. My taxonomy also leaves out the art-historicist view of Rohrbaugh (2003) and the
musical perdurantism of Caplan and Matheson (see 2006, 2008). These views also individuate works by
context, perhaps at the expense of structure. I don’t have space adequately to incorporate these views
here.
5 This example could be presented as a case of counterfactual doppelgangers, though I see no
significant difference, and some simplicity of presentation in casting it as counterfactual comparison
with the actual Hammerklavier. This type of example has been widely considered, though my version is
essentially a poor man’s version of Currie’s (1989, p. 62), with Hawaii substituted for Twin Earth.
288 JOSEPH G. MOORE
6 This second type of example is much less common, though a notable predecessor is Rohrbaugh
(2003, p. 182).
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 289
7 Whether Cage’s silent piece, 4’33”, has any musical content at all is at the heart of one interesting
argument that it isn’t a musical work. See Davies (1997).
290 JOSEPH G. MOORE
mark of this is that Beethoven and his contemporaries could, and did make
normative heightened levels of performative uniformity, precision, virtuosity,
and musical detail. But this actually makes Beethoven less tractable for my
purposes since we tend to focus so intently on, as it were, his music. Consider
instead pieces that are composed with a particular person or occasion preemi-
nently in mind, or that are strongly driven by some non-musical theme.
Couldn’t Handel’s Fireworks Music, Ellington’s Queen’s Suite, or Arlo Guth-
erie’s Alice’s Restaurant survive even greater variations in musical structure?
What’s going on here? Bound up in our work concept are two distinct
metaphysical criteria of individuation, one structural and the other provenan-
cial. Works themselves seem to vary in how two distinct types of properties
bear on their identity: Some works have greater structural detail than others,
and some are surrounded by more forceful and determinative art-historical
particularities. The Hammerklavier has more structural detail than the ditty
I just wrote (trust me); and this same ditty might have been composed anytime
in the past few decades, whereas Bartok’s Concerto for Orchestra, actually
composed in 1943, could not have been composed before 1942, when Sho-
stakovich penned the Seventh Symphony which Bartok satirizes.11
But I think our work concept is doubly shifty: Our relative sensitivity to these
two variably thick ingredients can itself shift and remix as our thought and talk
focus on different aesthetic issues, and as they make salient different kinds of
aesthetic property. So our individuative judgments shift as we consider different
musical works, and also as this consideration is driven by different aesthetic
concerns. Very occasionally, a perfect semantic storm blows in: We stumble
across an example that pulls our two criteria in different directions, as we
consider the case in a manner that leaves our divergent sensitivities in intu-
ition-numbing equipoise. This happens most readily in theoretical discussions,
like this one, in which an example is purposely constructed, and we regard it
without any particular concern (other, perhaps, than understanding the very
nature of this regard). In these rare, untethered, theoretical settings our work
concept blanks, and breaks down. But thankfully, what might be common in
philosophical discussion is almost unheard of in everyday talk of musical works
and performances of them.
11 . . . unless Shostakovich had composed his symphony earlier; but then Shostakovich’s symphony
wouldn’t have had its characteristic wartime theme, unless the war had happened earlier . . . I riff here on
Levinson’s nice example (1980, 1990, p. 71).
292 JOSEPH G. MOORE
12 For example, the debate about the role of instruments and performance-means bears on the proper
understanding of a work’s structural component. And the question of how much of a work’s provenance
is identity-determinative—can different composers from the same musico-historical era compose the
same piece?—applies to the provenancial component separately.
13 Here I’m sympathetic with the view of art ontology defended by Thomasson (2005).
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 293
broader aspects of the way we think about music and artistic practice. Here too
I’m sceptical. The problem, it seems to me, is that the obvious issues we might
plumb are, on reflection, either independent of the question of work identity or
themselves unsettled (or both). I’ve already suggested that the issue of existence
conditions won’t help. Where else might we look?
We might try looking outside the realm of Western classical music. Here,
though, we will encounter musical practices without works or, more often,
practices with musical works that might be structurally ‘thinner’ but beset by
the same individuative indeterminacy nevertheless.14 Our thought experi-
ments could be made just as inconclusive if we substituted for Beethoven’s
Hammerklavier sonata John Coltrane’s ‘Giant Steps’ or, I suspect, a piece of
Classical Indian, or Javenese gamelan music. Or perhaps we will find un-
helpfully that the concept of a musical work is elsewhere deployed in a quite
different and heterogeneous fashion, as has been argued for rock music.15
We might look to other entities—symbols, flags, car models, books—that
seem both created and repeatable. But here too, I suspect we will encounter
the same individuative indeterminacy. Indeed, the shifting view might be
extended to cover repeatable non-musical works such as Henry Ford’s
Model T and Saul Kripke’s Naming and Necessity, because work concepts
seem generally to yoke a structural or content-sensitive criterion together
with a provenancial one.
Finally, we might hope that some general theory about the production
and reception of artworks might sharpen our work concept. But I’m still
skeptical. Take the debate at play in our opening controversy. To paint in
very broad brushstrokes, the ‘neo-formalist’ holds that what is to be evalu-
ated in an artwork are the significant features we narrowly perceive in
encountering it in a gallery, in a book, or in performance, for example.
(These are sometimes called a work’s ‘aesthetic properties’ as opposed to its
‘artistic’ ones.) On this view, it might be useful to know a work’s art-
historical setting in order properly to perceive it—in order, that is, to
appreciate which of its many perceivable features are artistically relevant.16
But it is only these perceivable features that properly figure in an evaluation
14 Stephen Davies develops the useful notion of a work’s ‘thinness’ in Davies (2001).
15 See Gracyk (1996) and Kania (2006).
16 This importance of this is brought out by Walton’s famous Guernicas example (Walton 1970).
294 JOSEPH G. MOORE
of the work itself as opposed to the artist or the genre; and so it is only these
features that are built into the work metaphysically.
The neo-expressivist holds, by contrast, that since art is at core a communi-
cative activity, cultural and historical setting is essential to an artwork’s com-
municative force. On this view, a sound structure or a canvas may be the crucial
perceptual vehicle of an act of artistic communication, but it is still only one part
of that act. For this reason, the artwork is more inclusive than the sheer
communicative vehicle (i.e. the canvas or sound structure); the artwork also
includes the vehicle’s relations to cultural setting and to the contingent expres-
sive connections that are an indispensible part of the artistic communication.
Who’s right? Perhaps the neo-formalist and the neo-expressivist capture
divergent but equally useful ways to conceptualize the world’s enormously
diverse variety of artworks and artistic practices. This theoretical pluralism
would support, and be supported by the individuatively mongrel character
of our work concept. But even if only one view is right, the independence
of work-individuation from this general debate seems ensured by significant
theoretical looseness in this domain—that is, by unclarity or outright
freedom about whether one theoretical choice point has any bearing
upon another. For example, the neo-formalist might have reason to hold
that, although only narrowly perceptual properties of the artwork are
properly attended to while evaluating the work itself, other features includ-
ing relations to context are nevertheless part of the work. And the neo-
expressivist might favor a conception of the artwork according to which the
work itself is a narrow expressive vehicle, with the rest of the expressive act
captured in events centering around the artist.17 One can imagine moti-
vation for each of these complex views. And their very possibility shows
that the general debate about the nature of artistic practice privileges neither
the structural nor the provenancial strand of our work concept.
So, if I’m right, there’s a deeply irresolvable indeterminacy in our
concept of a musical work. This would defuse the debate about work-
individuation: Structuralism and contextualism overprivilege, in effect,
distinct and sometimes divergent individuative strands bond up in our
mongrel concept of a musical work. Each view is half-right, but also
17 This possible position resembles (in reverse!) David Davies’ (2004) view that a canvas or sound
structure is the ‘work-product’ while the artwork itself is the creative activity by which the artist
produced this product.
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 295
Along with these two claims, I also hold that we have a strong prima facie
reason to be realists about the existence of musical works. We seem
successfully to talk about and quantify over works; indeed, we seem to
perform them. Much of our music making seems to traffic in works; and
talk of musical works seems an ineliminable part of the performative,
critical, and even legal discourse that surrounds this music making.
But this combination of views is in tension. If Conceptual Indeterminacy
and No Sharpeners are both true, then it’s hard to see how realism about
musical works can be squared with Quine’s compelling metaphysical injunc-
tion against ‘entities without identity.’ How can we admit musical works into
our considered ontology if they lack clear identity criteria—if we can’t say,
even in principle, whether the Hawaiian-Hammer (or the Honey-Hammer)
and Beethoven’s actual Hammerklavier are one and the same musical work?
We might question or scrutinize Quine’s principle. Indeed, Quine himself
once archly asked whether certain entities (he had in mind meaning-notions
like propositions) might be accepted ‘as twilight half-entities to which the
identity concept is not to apply? If the disreputability of their origins is
undeniable, still bastardy, to the enlightened mind, is no disgrace.’18 But
despite the appeal of enlightened disrepute, I’m with Quine. At least, I’m
19 See Evans (1984), Moore (2008), and Salmon (1982, pp. 243–6).
20 For the purposes of the conceptual model, we might think of our criteria as tracking (often
overlapping) equivalence classes of actual and merely possible token performances (and playbacks)
formed under the same-structure and same-provenance relations respectively. To leave things there
would be circular, though, since the relations would be informed by the criteria. So in the next section,
I will replace these equivalence classes with entities that are more metaphysically articulated and
conceptually autonomous.
For early articulations of supervaluationism see, for example, van Frassen (1969) and Field (1973).
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 297
Hawaiian genius could have indicated the same sound structure despite
some relatively minor differences in their musical specifications. But how
great can these differences be? Not as great as the significant harmonic
differences that yield the Honey-Hammer, I think, but we might allow
differences in key, for example, and slight differences in specified tempo and
ornamentation. Where’s the cut-off point? The allowable degree of vari-
ation seems vague.
The relation of same-provenance also seems loose. Beethoven could have
indicated his sonata later than he did, perhaps even after he had composed
what is actually counted as his 30th piano sonata (op. 109). But could the
very same Hammerklavier, provenancially considered, have been composed
by one of Beethoven’s contemporaries? Considered in the right setting,
I think it could, but I suspect vagueness here as well.21 In any case, as far as
I can see, the vagueness in these two criterial relations, and the best way to
understand it (perhaps with a second application of supervaluationism?) is
independent of my account of the indeterminate criterial mixing.
A second complication has to do with the way that our judgments of
work identity might vary with judgmental setting. The norms and standards
of different musical genres seem to make for differences in the way we
individuate works within them.22 But as I suggested in Section III, our
identity judgments might also vary, even concerning one and the same case,
with ‘judgmental setting’—that is, with the variable conversational, aes-
thetic and practical concerns that are at play when an identity judgment is
called for.23 It’s not my goal here to establish that our work concept is
21 Matheson and Caplan have recently argued that de re modal claims in this realm could be
reinterpreted as claims that are really about de dicto possibilities (see 2008, pp. 496–8). This may be, but
I don’t see that they give any positive reason in favor of such reinterpretation other than that this is
required by theories of work individuation that I’ve challenged in this chapter. Construing my putative
de re modal intuition to be what it seems is certainly more straightforward. If I’m wrong about this, the
same-provenance relation would simply be less flexible modally. In any case, my view problematizes an
application of the de re/de dicto distinction in this realm, since our work concept traffics in two types of
entities (as I’ll argue below).
22 See S. Davies (2001, ch. 1), where the notion of the relative ‘thickness’ of a work is introduced,
though I think this notion properly applies only to a work’s structural component. And see D. Davies
(2004, ch. 5) where provenancial thickness (my expression) is claimed to be work-relative.
23 In other areas of philosophy, these settings might be called judgmental or conversational ‘contexts’;
and a view that honored this type of variation would be called ‘contextualism.’ (See Moore 1999,
pp. 347ff. for an articulation of contextualism in this sense. And see Lewis (1996) for an influential
application of the view to knowledge reports.) But this usage would be confusing in this debate where
‘contextualism’ is already used to pick out a dependence of musical works upon musico-historical
surrounding.
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 299
deployed in this type of setting-variable way, but I strongly suspect it. If so,
this would add another layer of complexity to our model, and raise some
new questions.24 However, as far as I can see, this setting-dependence of our
work concept cuts across its individuative indeterminacy and the super-
valuation model I’ve just proposed.
24 How much of this variability is due to a setting-dependent application of the two criteria separately,
and how much to a setting-dependent mixing of the criteria? (How can we tell?) And how can we best allow
this type of setting-dependence without turning judgmental evaluation into a subjective free-for-all?
25 See, for example, Davies (2008). Questions about the exact nature of sound structures strike me as
reflections of looseness in our structural criterion.
300 JOSEPH G. MOORE
a wide range of possible answers to such questions. In any case, these worries
don’t tell more forcefully against my position than the positions to which
I’ve argued it’s superior. We need confidence only that there is some
workable account of sound structures, or at least of sound structure talk.
The more novel construction is that of a provenancial-work.26 I think of
P-works as causal webs of intentionally linked action-tokens grounded
initially in status-endowing actions of a composer and the musical insti-
tutions that surround her. They spread diachronically from the actions
involved in composition and work-endowment through certain performa-
tive, evaluative, and representational events that those acts of composition
influence. Since the acts of composition, work-establishment, performance,
and evaluation are to be specified and understood relative to a background
of expressive and performative traditions that inform them, we can usefully
regard P-works as ‘tradition-threads’—that is, as individual threads in the
broader causal tapestry of musical, psychological, and social events upon
which a musical culture and tradition supervene.
An example might help. The P-work that corresponds to Beethoven’s
Hammerklavier piano sonata (call it the ‘P-Hammer’) is to be specified and
understood against a broad range of performance traditions, contingent
musico-expressive conventions, and prominent cultural events that would
have been at play in the Viennese musical culture in which Beethoven
composed his sonata. This expressive background is roughly a collection of
musical conventions that Beethoven and his contemporaries would have
implicitly regarded as the relevant musical backdrop against which a new
musical composition was to achieve its expressive effects.
The P-Hammer itself starts with some specific actions of Beethoven’s—
his deciding to compose another sonata, or his being commissioned to do
so. They extend through the process of composition, and the moment
when Beethoven (or a publisher or a deadline) determined that his com-
position was done. This is the period during which the P-Hammer came
into existence.
The P-Hammer continues by including the specific performative and
evaluative tradition that Beethoven’s composition has brought about. It
includes all token performances intended to be of Beethoven’s 29th piano
26 Predecessors here might include Rohrbaugh (2003), as well as Caplan and Matheson (2006, 2008),
though I can’t pursue here exactly how my notion compares to theirs.
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 301
27 My intent here is to capture the intuition that a work, even in its provenancial sense, might be kept
alive even if there were no more performances (or playbacks) of it. This might be so, I think, if a culture
continued to think and write about the work, or the work continued to influence the composition of
other works. A plausible minimal condition for the continued existence of P-works, suggested by
Rohrbaugh’s 2003 account of photographs, might be that there remains at least the potential for
performance.
28 I investigate these in a follow-up manuscript ‘Musical Works as Tradition-Threads.’
302 JOSEPH G. MOORE
29 This commitment to the existence and utility of a unified work concept rules my view out as a form
of ‘concept pluralism.’ Still, in allowing that our core-concept binds together distinct conceptual strands,
my view is a near neighbor. Indeed, as far as I can see, shiftism about the individuation of individual
musical works is compatible with pluralism about the application conditions for our artwork concept(s).
Christy Mag Uidhir and P.D. Magnus plausibly defend such a view (2011).
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 303
that when we count the thirty-two individual musical works that comprise
Beethoven’s complete piano sonatas, we traffic in sixty-four distinct entities!
If I’m right, our work concept involves a tacit semantic presupposition that
is false—namely, that there is a realm of metaphysically unproblematic entities
that answer in a clean, one-one fashion to our talk and counting of musical
works. This presupposition might have arisen from a sort of tacit and collective
linguistic pretense. It’s musically and culturally useful to making certain ‘work-
wise’ distinctions among groups of performances and topics of appreciation
and evaluation. Speakers within a musical practice adopt or simply inherit the
practice of talking as if there are ‘things’ to which these groupings and topics
answer in a one-one fashion. Individual such ‘things’ are given names which
draw revealingly on both musical and provenancial features. And a work
concept and a surrounding discourse are quickly up and running.
The false presupposition is never exposed by the normal conditions in
which the concept is applied. Most people never consider, and never need
to consider whether there is really one metaphysically coherent ‘thing’ that
‘The Hammerklavier Sonata’ picks out. A philosopher might point out that
this musical work can’t comfortably be identified with a score, with a psycho-
logical idea in Beethoven’s head, with a class of performances, or with any
other prima facie plausible candidate; and she might note that musical works
are philosophically strange in other ways besides. But the utility of the practice
is largely untouched, even if conceptually-minded composers might stretch it
by playing off the philosophy. In short, our work concept continues to
function perfectly well despite theorectical problems with the presupposition.
All of this might seem to make my theory a sort of non-eliminative
fictionalism about musical works, since it seeks to support our thought and
talk about musical works against a metaphysical backdrop that only imper-
fectly matches our conceptual scheme. But there is a crucial difference,
I think, between my view and the interesting work-fictionalisms that have
recently been proposed by Andrew Kania (2008) and by Ross Cameron
(2008). The central claim that those theories are fictionalist about—‘Musical
works exist’—is not, on my view, true only when considered one way but
not another, or true only relative to one way of speaking English and
not another.30 On my theory, this existence claim is true simpliciter. It’s
30 Thus, Kania distinguishes between the claim as made in descriptive metaphysics and as made in real
metaphysics (metaphysics of the ‘fundamental level’), while Cameron distinguishes between the truth of
304 JOSEPH G. MOORE
determinately true that musical works exist because it’s true on each
sharpening of our work concept—S-works exist, and so do P-works. This
seems enough for the view to merit the label ‘realism’ and avoid ‘fictionalism.’
In the end, the view defended here is perhaps best characterized not by
any label but by the truth-status it accords various claims about musical
works. While the existence claim comes out determinately true, the mis-
match my view situates between semantic functioning and semantic phe-
nomenology shows up in the indeterminacy it posits elsewhere. I have
argued at length, of course, that it can be indeterminate whether the actual
Hammerklavier is identical to the Hawaiian-Hammer, and also whether it is
identical to the Honey-Hammer. But the view also holds, for example, that
it is indeterminate whether sound structures are musical works.31 And
although I have not argued for it here, the view also allows, more notably,
that it is indeterminate whether a musical work can change musically over
time, and whether musical works can come into and go out of existence.
Tradition-threads satisfy these conditions, but sound structures don’t.
The mismatch is not that such claims seem to us to be clearly true, or to
be clearly false. Indeed, I think conflicted intuitions about these issues help
sustain debate about the nature of musical works. The mismatch is rather
that my theory challenges the assumption, connected to the false presuppo-
sition discussed above, that these claims must have some determinate truth-
value or other—that is, that unless we are to abandon our work concept or
regard it with suspicion, these questions about the nature of musical works
this sentence in English and the falsity of a homophonic sentence in ‘Ontologese,’ English’s metaphysi-
cally more considered counterpart. Despite my sympathy for these views, I worry that musical and
philosophical discourse, especially concerning such existence claims, doesn’t always fall cleanly and
discernibly on just one side of some such linguistic-cum-semantic divide. And my theory has the
advantage of not requiring one. In any case, these fictionalist views are driven by the desire to avoid
the eternal existence of musical works, while (as I’ll observe in a movement) my view partially obviates
this motivation by allowing that the existence conditions for musical works are indeterminate.
31 The sharpening ‘sound structures are sound structures’ is true while the sharpening ‘sound
structures are tradition-threads’ is false. This result—that neither S-works nor P-works are determinately
musical works—accords nicely, I think, with the philosophical view I’ve tried to motivate. I should
acknowledge, however, that not everything runs smoothly in this world of supervaluations. For
example, interpreted in a straightforward fashion ‘Musical works are individuatively determinate’ is
determinately true; and of course this seems to be precisely the claim I’ve been arguing against!
However, it’s not implausible, I think, to give this sentence a meta-linguistic reinterpretation. In fact,
I suggest that the sentence really claims that talk of an individual musical work univocally refers to a
unique and individuatively determinate entity. And the supervaluation account of our work concept
allows us to deny this claim.
MUSICAL WORKS: A MASH-UP 305
must have clear and determinate answers. I hope I’ve shown that this
needn’t be so: We can hold that musical works exist even if certain philo-
sophically unsettled claims about them are indeterminate in truth value.
References
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Davies, D. (2004) Art as Performance (Oxford: Blackwell)
Davies, S. (1997) ‘John Cage’s 4’ 33”’ Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75: 448–62
——(2001) Musical Works and Performances: A Philosophical Exploration (New York:
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——(2003) Themes in the Philosophy of Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
——(2007) ‘Versions of Musical Works and Literary Translations’ in K. Stock (ed)
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——(2008) ‘Musical Works and Orchestral Colour’ British Journal of Aesthetics
48: 363–75
Dodd, J. (2007) Works of Music: An Essay in Ontology (Oxford: Oxford University
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Evans, G. (1984) ‘Can There Be Vague Objects?’ Analysis: 38
Field, H. (1973) ‘Theory Change and the Indeterminacy of Reference’ Journal of
Philosophy 70: 462–81
Goehr, L. (1992) The Imaginary Museum of Musical Works: An Essay in the Philosophy
of Music (Oxford: Oxford University Press)
Gracyk, T. (1996) Rhythm and Noise—An Aesthetics of Rock (Durham, NC: Duke
University Press)
Kania, A. (2006) ‘Making Tracks: The Ontology of Rock Music’ The Journal of
Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64(4): 410–14
——(2008) ‘The Methodology of Musical Ontology: Descriptivism and its Impli-
cations’ British Journal of Aesthetics 48(4): 426–44
Kivy, P. (1983) ‘Platonism in Music: a Kind of Defense’ Grazer Philosophische
Studien 19: 109–29
306 JOSEPH G. MOORE
Kania, Andrew 32–4, 38–41, 110, 115–16, obscure predication 128, 135–7, 154
198, 200, 202, 214 open-endedness 87–106
Kearns, Stephen 189 simple schema 91
Kivy, Peter 33, 64–6, 74, 163, 169, 170n, strong modal schema 92, 101
171–2 weak modal schema 92, 101, 104
Koslicki, Kathrin 143–7, 151, 154 weak modal non-relational
Kraut, Robert 37, 38, 39, 42, 43 schema 95–6, 101, 104
INDEX 309