On Sun, 25 May 1997, fs6y097@public.uni-hamburg.de (John King) wrote: >Not having a philosophical background, I'm not at all sure what you mean or >how J fits in. I wonder if you might care to elaborate as EJ is not someone >who traditionally inhabits the orbits of people like Wittgenstein for >instance. If anything, do not EJ's view on authorship, on writing, on >reading the world (and not just in the "writing" of the pen and the press) >in the form of the infinite play of forms within morphological regularities >(Linneus' classification of nature as a form of metaphysical encoding of >Platonic certainties is very important to EJ's later world view) stand in >some contrast to Wittgenstein who (in my very primitive understanding) >places the divine and the metaphysical outside the sphere of language? And >indeed reduces language from something revelatory to various games played by >their own rules... > >JK It was just a marginal note about EJ's texts cited in the discussion here. Desinvolture is a Latin word that makes me recall Ryle's famous 'clever clown' argument. What makes a clown's performance clever? The cleverness of the clown's performance is a characteristic of the performance, not of the clown's mind. Similarly, desinvolture is a a feature of actions, not of inner states. As for Wittgenstein, a mystic thinker, his philosophical views on language are, of course, very far from those of EJ, though he was an attentive reader of Heidegger. Larbaud Jr.
Replies to this Message
Markup © John King, 2008. Web archive generated Tue, 21st August 2007.