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The Matter of Vision. Peter WyethЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Matter of Vision - Peter Wyeth


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of the amount of information that we receive, although that is an indication of how much we are picking up, but of the depth, the intelligence, the sheer wisdom that Vision brings. What I mean to suggest by wisdom is that the nature of the knowledge gained from Vision goes far deeper than common currency would suggest. Wisdom suggests insight, perhaps combined with mature reflection. The wonder of Vision is that it is intelligent in the sense of making discriminations, judgements – just as in the first moments we lay eyes upon a new person – and those judgements would seem to involve millions, perhaps billions of discriminations. That means the brain19 making choices, according to biological criteria, what might be called instinctive, tacit, or natural wisdom – dare I say the best kind – rather than the rational Darwin’s List type,20 the formal kind of the Academy. It is worth stressing that the criteria of this wisdom are biological rather than sociological or philosophical. That means the discriminations are about survival (for reproduction). Evolution makes those choices solely on their being advantageous for survival. For the most part those discriminations are Automatic and do not appear in consciousness. This wisdom, this intelligence is unconscious.

      My suggestion would be that many of the qualities we think come from Language in fact come from Vision.

      Those processes also obtain in Cinema as we watch people on the screen. We gain less intimate information than being in somebody’s company, but what films show us is people in action, with a far broader range of actions than we would normally experience with an individual, the process of drama, the intensified emotions of actors seen on a bright screen in a darkened room.

       The articulation of Vision

      One problem Vision has is that of articulation. Language could be much more active in articulating Vision, but the ideology of Logocentrism tends to deny and demote Vision, minimising and denigrating it. The result is that, although Language is heavily dependent upon Vision for its references in its own medium, it has not often been used to taking on the positive task of articulating the qualities of Vision. In the letters of Cezanne we see the attempt of an artist to put into words his daily struggle with expressing himself in painting and in Rilke’s letters on Cezanne we see something related, a poet trying to find ways to express the poetry of the Visual in a great painter. It is possible for language to articulate Vision, to serve Vision, and it is suggested here that would bring some balance to the role Language plays, against the tide of Logocentrism. Language serving Vision would be both appropriate and constructive, a role of which it is capable, but in which it is much less experienced than is good for Vision.

      I see therefore I am.

       The Automatic

      I would see it as another instance of Logocentrism that the area beyond Consciousness receives only the negative of the term as its title – unconscious. The terms suggest that Consciousness is the privileged one and its opposite number relatively unimportant and therefore deserves merely the negative term.

      The comparison William James is said to have made between the conscious and Automatic as a pin in the Albert Hall gives an image of the difference of scale between the two, in which case Man is arguably an unconscious creature.

       Emotion


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