James Tartaglia

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James Tartaglia
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Born (1973-10-29) October 29, 1973 (age 50)
Portsmouth, UK
EducationUniversity College London (BA, MPhil, PhD)
EraContemporary
TitleProfessor of Metaphysical Philosophy
Websitewww.jamestartaglia.com

James Phillip Frank Tartaglia (born 29 October 1973) is a British philosopher who defends metaphysical idealism and existential nihilism, as well as a jazz saxophonist whose "jazz-philosophy fusion" combines jazz music with philosophical ideas.

Biography

Tartaglia was born in Portsmouth, England, and grew up in Hereford, where he started playing alto saxophone at age 11 after hearing Cannonball Adderley's recording of "Another Kind of Soul".[1] [2] He was winner in the soloist category of the Daily Telegraph Young Jazz Competition in 1991 and successfully auditioned in Frankfurt for a scholarship to Berklee College of Music, Boston, where he studied from 1992-3; his saxophone teacher was George Garzone.[3] He began an economics degree at University College London in 1993, but soon switched to philosophy. He obtained a BA (1996), M.Phil. (1998) and Ph.D. (2001) in philosophy from UCL, where he studied with Tim Crane and J.J. Valberg.[4] He was Visiting Lecturer at the University of Birmingham from 2001-2 and then was appointed Lecturer in Philosophy at Keele University in 2002, where he stayed to become Professor of Metaphysical Philosophy in 2017; his inaugural lecture was a jazz-philosophy fusion performance entitled, “I’m Gonna Tell You the Meaning of Life”.[5] He is an Associate Editor at the journal Human Affairs.[6]

Philosophy

Tartaglia argues that nihilism is an evaluatively neutral fact about reality;[7] nihilism is not a negative state of affairs, as it is standardly assumed to be, nor a positive state of affairs, as per the 'Sunny Nihilism' defended by Wendy Syfret.[8] [9] When Tartaglia was questioned by Rowan Williams on BBC Radio 4's Moral Maze, Williams' line of questioning concerned the lack of moral guidance that his neutral nihilism offers.[10] In response to a similar line of questioning from Rabbi Adam Jacobs, Tartaglia said the problem with using the meaning of life as a basis for moral judgements is that, "nobody's ever been able to agree on what it is."[11] In a review of Philosophy in a Meaningless Life (2016) for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, Guy Bennett-Hunter is sympathetic to Tartaglia's idealist 'transcendent hypothesis' but not his nihilism, arguing that there are various 'unstated affinities' between Tartaglia's views and those of Karl Jaspars, and that Jaspars, like David E. Cooper, manages to avoid nihilism by appealing to ineffability.[12] A book symposium on Philosophy in a Meaningless Life was published in 2017, featuring responses to the book from Philip Goff, Ronald A. Kuipers, Tracy Llanera, Alan Malachowski, Bjørn Torgrim Ramberg, Brooke Alan Trisel and J.J. Valberg, among others.[13] In Philosophy in a Technological World: Gods and Titans (2020), which Raymond Tallis endorsed as 'a major work of philosophy by one of the UK's most original philosophers'[14], Tartaglia focuses on metaphysical idealism, for which he provides five arguments: the first about why there is anything at all, the second about consciousness, the third about the distinction between abstract and concrete, the fourth about the philosophy of time and the fifth about human history.[15] In a review in Philosophy Now, Kieran Brayford writes that the 'book is terse, lively, and enjoyable' and that he would 'especially recommend it to those who feel instinctively rankled by its idealist leanings. There is enough in the book to maybe change your mind.'[16] In popular writings and lectures about idealism, Tartaglia has emphasized its near universality within world culture[17] and its ability to preserve common sense intuitions.[18]

References

  1. Birmingham Post, 23 June 2016, p. 31
  2. ljazzn (2016-06-15). "INTERVIEW: James Tartaglia – (Jazz-Philosophy Fusion, new album and autumn dates)". London Jazz News. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  3. James Tartaglia CV, Adrian Piper Foundation
  4. Tartaglia, James (2016). Philosophy in a Meaningless Life. London: Bloomsbury. p. x. ISBN 978-1-3500-1751-1.
  5. Keele University, events 2019
  6. Human Affairs website
  7. Why it's okay that life has no meaning | James Tartaglia, retrieved 2023-03-17
  8. Good news for nihilists? Life is meaningless after all, say philosophers CBC Radio, December 14, 2021
  9. Nihilism can make you happier, even in the Covid era. No really, let me explain The Guardian, 26 August 2021
  10. "BBC Radio 4 - Moral Maze, Meaning". BBC. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  11. hersh (2022-04-24). "Atheist vs Rabbi: Is Life Meaningless?". Aish.com. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  12. Bennett-Hunter, Guy (2016-04-07). "Review of Philosophy in a Meaningless Life: A System of Nihilism, Consciousness and Reality". ISSN 1538-1617.
  13. "Nihilism and the Meaning of Life: A Philosophical Dialogue with James Tartaglia". www.philosophyoflife.org. Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  14. bloomsbury.com. "Philosophy in a Technological World". Bloomsbury. Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  15. Tartaglia, James (2021). Gods and Titans. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 71–93. ISBN 978-1-3501-8501-2.
  16. "Philosophy in a Technological World: Gods and Titans by James Tartaglia | Issue 144 | Philosophy Now". philosophynow.org. Retrieved 2023-03-24.
  17. PhD, Prof James Tartaglia (2023-01-01). "Idealists all over the world". Essentia Foundation. Retrieved 2023-03-17.
  18. Idealism and Reality | James Tartaglia, retrieved 2023-03-17

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