Abstrakt: |
The sciences aim to get at the truth about the nature of the world. Do the humanities have a similar goal—namely, to get at the truth about things like novels, paintings, and historical events? I consider a few different ways in which the humanities aim at the truth about their objects, in the process giving rise to epistemic goods such as knowledge and understanding. Two works in the humanities are used as test cases: the historian Tyler Stovall's , Paris Noir (1996) and the musicologist Susan McClary's article, 'The Blasphemy of Talking Politics During Bach Year' (1987). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |