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II. Talk on the Common Course (1952)
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We may define a metaphor as the sensual manifestation of significance.
But what is significance? What is being signified in art?
Heraclitus says that Apollo neither reveals nor conceals. What
can be revealed or concealed? Truth. Apollo neither reveals nor
conceals truth, but he signifies it. The miracle of beauty is to
signify truth, to point to it, to promise it, to indicate its presence,
and yet never to reveal it. This non-revealing does not mean concealment.
Who has eyes to see will see -- provided he has artistic eyes. Apollo
is at the same time the god of art and the god of oracles. Like
art, oracles only signify truth, they do not reveal and tell it.
It depends upon the man who receives the oracle whether or not he
will understand its truth. Without eyes nobody is able to see beauty
signifying truth and without the "know thyself," inscribed on the
temple in Delphi, nobody is able to grasp the truth of the oracle.
The key to the understanding of a work of art, like the key to the
oracles given in Delphi, lies in the beholder himself.
The work of art does more for the beholder than the oracle does
for the man who comes to seek its advice. Beauty invokes truth in
the beholder himself; it cannot tell him a truth which he never
possessed, but it can bring to life in him a truth of which he had
never before been aware. Beauty, signifying truth, arouses the beholder
and enables him to join in the true artistic experience. The aura
of significance throws its light to the beholder so that he now
can see, like an artist, right through reality, through the merely
existing being and discover new potentialities of truth behind it.
He will see through his own feelings and experiences and discover
a deeper meaning to them; and this discovery never comes to an end
as long as he lives, because the great work of art will tell him
different things at the different stages of his life, depending
on his own experiences. The more truth he has in him, the more will
beauty eventually reveal to him.
We ask once more: What is a metaphor? The metaphor is closely
connected with maya, the great instrument of all art. The
god of maya is Vishnu, one of the gods of India, who endlessly
dreams up worlds, one after the other, in the infinite time and
space of Indian religion. In the figure of Vishnu, mythological
thinking became aware of its artistic element, the element of world
dreaming. The artist is a world dreamer in the sense that he creates
world images. This corresponds to one of man's deepest wishful dreams.
Post-mythological thinking and creativity faces the reality of Being
and stills its craving for meaning by making Being more meaningful;
yet at the bottom of our heart, there remains the original shock
of human confrontation with reality and the original desire to live
in a perfect world, which by itself would unite Being and meaning,
where meaning would simply exist and Being be meaningful in itself.
Physiognomical phenomena seem to indicate such a unity of being
and meaning. Facial expressions, a smile, gestures, intonations
of voice and forms of movement are sensual and yet endowed with
a meaning such as can only be revealed to us through direct verbal
communication. It is as though we sense significance with all our
senses, yet we can neither grasp nor define it. The artist who thinks
in metaphors can grasp this sensed significance; his vision consists
of a sensual image of Being which he gets hold of through his "sixth
sense," the synthesizer of the other senues. This image contains
the significance which we only "sense" but which the artist can
work out in detail.
Artistic creativity develops in three stages: There is first the
unoontrollod life experience of the artist, the almost mythical
mass of sensations, thoughts, intentions and feelings, out of which
he conceives the nuclear metaphor of his work. He then proceeds
to develop the whole web of related metaphors which eventually constitute
the work of art. This procedure follows certain correlative significances,
which make one thing after another meaningful until a whole fabric
of similar experiences is assembled and organized. One metaphor
leads to another metaphor; it is a mutual give and take process
in which the metaphor inspires the artist and the artist works out
the metaphor.
A metaphor is not a symbol. A symbol, meaningless in itself, is
a sign that stands for something else. Symbols are used in scientific
thinking and are illustrated by examples. In the statement: Three
things are in this room, we have used a verbal logical symbol,
thing and a mathematical symbol, the number three. Thing
is in itself meaningless, but can be exemplified by chair, table
and couch. I call them all things and thereby establish a relationship
among them, a unity of three; this relationship between the
three things in the room exists only insofar as they all are things,
they are not interrelated and there is no communication between
the symbol, thing and what it may stand for: chair, table,
etc.
In the metaphor: "The ship plows the sea," an interrelationship
between ship and sea is established; at the same time, plow and
ship communicate their activity to each other through which (characteistic
of Homer) an intercommunication between land and sea is brought
about. The artistic vision lies in the action of carrying-over (meta-phor),
the evoking of one experience through another and the resulting
correspondences. The symbol works like a magic ray which penetrates
Being, unites certain things, throws a special light on them which
shows table, chair and couch as things, and brings about a transfiguration
of Being. The metaphor works like a magic chain reaction which is
started through the inner human experience with the world, carrying
over the experience of one activity into another, of one movement
into another, of one significance into another, bringing about a
transfiguration of Meaning. Metaphorical thinking is constantly
overwhelmed by the vision of such correspondences.
All art is metaphorical and artistic creation is projective metaphorical
thinking. In mythical art, it is true, symbols play a dominant role,
not because mythical art uses symbols to represent and stand for
something else, but because mythology itself is a world which is
supposed to stand for the real world, to hide reality from man.
In this sense, mythical art is truly "surrealistic," it depicts
the "true" reality of the surrealistic world of the myth. Therefore,
the mythical artist uses not only mental symbols but needs the real
magic symbol, the fetish, which plays a role even in the highest
developed mythical art. The reason why we can understand mythical
art even though we no longer believe in mythical symbols and fetishes
is that the metaphor here, as in all true art, has prevailed. Metaphysical
art is supramundane, it reaches out beyond the world and tries to
establish another, the truly metaphysical world order. Characteristic
of it is the allegory in which a concrete event is represented by
a figurative story destined to cover several similar happenings.
As such, the allegory is similar to the symbol; its figure also
unites different "things" without establishing an artistic intercommunication
between them. This is the reason for the proverbial dryness of allegories.
In a great metaphysical poet like Dante the allegory receives metaphorical
significance; in the Divina Comedia allegories and symbols
merely assist the rise of the great Dantean metaphors. Free art
is transcendent; it does not represent anything that cannot be grasped
by the metaphor alone.
Homer is the first artist who created a world in free imagination.
No longer bound by mythology and not yet under the authority of
metaphysics, he uses metaphors with such incredible purity and freshness
that they have become the admiration of all succeeding generations.
Symbols make their appearance in Greek art only after Homer; they
already play a role in the Greek drama, whose lyrics are still built
on Homeric metaphors, but whose "plots" develop around metaphysical
ideas. Symbols have played the greatest and the most ruinous role
in pictorial art, which developed in its amazing modern form after
Cezanne liberated it from all symbolic meaning. (It seems probable
that at some historical moment between Homer and ourselves transcending
art broke through all layers of symbols -- in Shakespeare and in
Rembrandt). Cezanne's art represents metaphorical ideas; in this
sense modern art is non-representative, regardless of whether it
is abstract or non-abstract art.
Free art is neither mythical nor realistic, neither classic nor
romantic. Homer's art can not be placed in any of these categories;
it is truly transcending and Olympic because it transcends towards
the Olympus. The Olympus, as conceived by Homer, is neither a fictional
world in the midst of the real one nor a supramundane realm far
above us, but the pinnacle set on top of this, our world. From the
Olympus of free art, which is open to everybody, we look down into
ourselves and into the world.
Colors and plasticity of Homer's style (compare with Milton) make
it difficult to believe that he was blind; and yet, every reading
of the Iliad or the Odyssey again suggests this possibility. Only
a blind man, one feels, is so completely alone in the world with
nothing to stand on but his own being, and only in blindness can
there develop a visionary power which will gather the whole world
around one man who becomes its veritable center.
Homer's hero is Man. His heroes, Achilles and Ulysses, are metaphors
for man, not symbols -- as Adam in Christian speculation, or as
Dante, who is his own hero and at the same time a symbol for man,
or as the Ulysses of Joyce. They are single individuals, full personalities
whose lives form the topic of the two epic poems. They are the central
metaphors out of which all other metaphors are developed into a
web of consistent composition. The tragedy of Achilles' early death
is enhanced by not showing it; death is always present in Achilles'
life, in his brooding and raging. Achilles is absolutely alone because
he is doomed, doomed by his own free decision. This free decision
forces the predestined order of moira (necessity) of Greek
myth (as well as the closed cosmological order of Greek metaphysics)
wide open; we do not know whether Homer himself invented this or
whether mythical stories before him had already indicated this possibility.
The figure of Ulysses makes the former alternative more probable.
In any case, the non-dependence of both Achilles and Ulysses on
necessity and fate is the reason why they were neglected in Greek
tragedy; and even if Homer did not altogether invent their freedom
of decision, he chose them as his heroes for that reason.
Achilles' choice was for a short life, with the opportunity of
bestowing upon it an eternal significance (which is the Greek understanding
of fame), worthy to be forever praised by poets. In the Odyssey
Homer clearly shows the greatness of this decision against a long,
happy existence without special significance. Here Ulysses meets
Achilles in Hades: Achilles knows that it is better, in a sense,
to be alive as a miserable slave on earth than to be the lifeless
shadow of a great man in the world of the dead. A similar decision
occurs in the Odyssey when Ulysses refuses to become the immortal
husband of the nymph Calypso -- almost a blasphemy for Greek religious
feeling which admired and envied its gods for their immortality.
Ulysses' reason is different; he had already defied Poseidon, the
god of the seas, when he insisted on establishing his own identity.
Ulysses chose to remain himself, human and mortal, with the possibility
of free self-determination outside of and above everything else.
Homer places Achilles in the middle of world events which happen
around him so that he may have the opportunity to do his one great
deed: defeat Hector and win victory for the Greeks. There he sits
in his tent, the center of everything that goes on, the fighting
gods above him and the fighting men around him, he himself almost
motionless, imprisoned within himself. A prisoner of his own self-chosen
destiny, he has also become the center of himself so that it seems
unlikely that he will be able to break through his lonely brooding
and undertake the one great deed for which he has doomed himself.
Only the death of his friend, Patroclos, breaks the spell and draws
him out of himself. Not Ulysses but Achilles is the great sufferer
in Homer; Achilles suffers and rages, Ulysses endures and prevails.
With one single decision, Achilles has designed his whole life and
its end; he acts in the world as though he acted from beyond the
grave. He anticipated his own death and now time stands still around
him, and space is reduced to the space within himself. Everything
that goes on around him in the space which is the world contradicts
him and almost mocks him. And the same is true for the time of the
others, which is absolutely separated from his own predictably limited
time. Between the infinite time of the gods and the absolutely limited
time of Achilles lies the time of the mortals around him, which
has an end but an end that no man foreknows. Because he has chosen
the shortest span of life, Achilles has become the opposite of the
gods. In a sense, Homer puts him above the gods of Greek myth, who
are, as it were, condemned to immortality and therefore cannot prove
eternal courage like Achilles.
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