艺术、哲学与概念的连通性:Ricoeur、Deleuze和Guattari

IF 0.2 0 PHILOSOPHY
C. Cazeaux
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引用次数: 1

摘要

传统上,概念被描绘成离散的容器,这些容器基于拥有共享的、统一的属性,将对象或质量聚集在一起。本文的重点是一个概念的对比概念,认为概念是由他们的能力延伸和连接其他概念。近代大陆哲学中有两种理论坚持这一观点:一种来自利科尔,另一种来自德勒兹和瓜塔里。两者都试图将艺术和哲学联系起来,但它们在如何将联系过程理论化的问题上存在分歧。在里科看来,一个概念只有在其本质上倾向于与他人建立联系,并且容易通过隐喻被误用的情况下才是一个概念,而在德勒兹和瓜塔里看来,联系被保留为每一个概念与其他概念相互一致的一般概念,这种一致性归因于“桥接”的外部作用。作者论证了这种差异对哲学家如何看待艺术-哲学关系的影响,并认为利科尔更适合提供一种对美学开放的哲学话语理论。Ricoeur可以通过隐喻来表现它,而Deleuze和Guattari只能通过一系列的技术主张来断言或陈述一种艺术-哲学关系。示-说区别的意义在于,它可以证明概念连通性位于哲学家各自本体论中的深度,并有助于揭示概念连通性对该本体论的价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Art, Philosophy and the Connectivity of Concepts: Ricoeur and Deleuze and Guattari
ABSTRACT Concepts are traditionally pictured as discrete containers that bring together objects or qualities based on the possession of shared, uniform properties. This paper focuses on a contrasting notion of the concept which holds that concepts are defined by their capacity to reach out and connect with other concepts. Two theories in recent continental philosophy maintain this view: one from Ricoeur, the other from Deleuze and Guattari. Both are offered as attempts to bring art and philosophy into relation, but they differ over how the process of connection is theorized. With Ricoeur, a concept is only a concept if it is inherently predisposed to connect with others, and open to being misapplied through metaphor, whereas, with Deleuze and Guattari, connection is left as the general notion of each and every concept being mutually consistent with other concepts, with the consistency attributed to the external action of “bridging.” The author demonstrates the impact of this difference on how the philosophers perceive the art–philosophy relation, and argues that Ricoeur is better placed to provide a theory of philosophical discourse that is open to the aesthetic. Ricoeur can show it through metaphor, while Deleuze and Guattari can only assert or state an art–philosophy relation through a series of technical claims. The significance of the showing–saying distinction is that it can demonstrate the depth with which conceptual connectivity is located within the philosophers’ respective ontologies, and can help to reveal the value of conceptual connectivity for that ontology.
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