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Philosophy in a New Key

A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite and Art

Szerző
Cambridge
Kiadó: Harvard University Press
Kiadás helye: Cambridge
Kiadás éve:
Kötés típusa: Ragasztott papírkötés
Oldalszám: 313 oldal
Sorozatcím:
Kötetszám:
Nyelv: Angol  
Méret: 20 cm x 14 cm
ISBN: 0-674-66503-1
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Előszó


A PREFATORY NOTE TO THE THIRD EDITION
Five years ago, when the second edition of Philosophy in a New Key appeared, the book had already taken on, for its author, the character of a prolegomenon... Tovább

Előszó


A PREFATORY NOTE TO THE THIRD EDITION
Five years ago, when the second edition of Philosophy in a New Key appeared, the book had already taken on, for its author, the character of a prolegomenon to a larger work. A decade had elapsed since its composition, and in that time the theory of music proposed in Chapter VIII had undergone a considerable expansion and had, indeed, grown into a philosophy not only of music, but of all the arts. But this change of character was, as yet, only for the author; the philosophy of art had not appeared in print. Since then it has met its public, and Philosophy in a New Key now is frankly a prelude to Feeling and Form.
Now; what is "now"? We cannot step twice into the same river. We cannot arrest a day, a melody, or a thought. Now, even as the third edition goes to press, the philosophy of art here engendered has in turn become a mere station in the progress of ideas. These ideas, tentative and imperfect as their expression in this first book had to be, now promise to transcend the realm of "aesthetics" (to use the unfortunate current word), and lead us to a new philosophy of living form, living nature, mind, and some of the very deep problems of human society that we usually designate as ethical problems. In the course of such a long development they are sure to undergo changes, like babies grown into men, whose fading snapshots in the family album are hard to reconcile with their football frowns or Rotarian smiles in the newspaper today. Some readers, therefore, who are dissatisfied with many things in this book, may find some misgivings allayed if they pursue the development of certain paradoxical or arbitrary-sounding assertions through their subsequent history; others, who like forensic argument, will triumphantly find that the earlier and later versions of many a concept are inconsistent, so the whole philosophy goes down refuted. But consistency should be demanded only within the com- Vissza

Fülszöveg


PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY
A Study in the SymboL'um of Read on, Rite, and Art
Third Edition SUSANNE K. LANGER
"One of those synoptic works which, by bringing together separate areas of knowledge, suddenly reveals the pattern of reality and gives new meaning to all one's piecemeal explorations I know of no book in the field of aesthetics which in our time has had such a profound effect."
— Herbert Read
"The central problem of this interesting book is to ascertain precisely the functions served by myth, ritual, and especially the arts, and to develop an adequate theory of artistic significance . . . What is novel in this book is . . . Mrs. Langer s development of her theme within the framework of a general theory of symbolism, in accordance with her conviction that the coming period of creative philosophy will use the distinctions of symbolic analysis as its key concepts. To her task she brings an unusual equipment: a solid grounding in modern logical and philosophical analysis,... Tovább

Fülszöveg


PHILOSOPHY IN A NEW KEY
A Study in the SymboL'um of Read on, Rite, and Art
Third Edition SUSANNE K. LANGER
"One of those synoptic works which, by bringing together separate areas of knowledge, suddenly reveals the pattern of reality and gives new meaning to all one's piecemeal explorations I know of no book in the field of aesthetics which in our time has had such a profound effect."
— Herbert Read
"The central problem of this interesting book is to ascertain precisely the functions served by myth, ritual, and especially the arts, and to develop an adequate theory of artistic significance . . . What is novel in this book is . . . Mrs. Langer s development of her theme within the framework of a general theory of symbolism, in accordance with her conviction that the coming period of creative philosophy will use the distinctions of symbolic analysis as its key concepts. To her task she brings an unusual equipment: a solid grounding in modern logical and philosophical analysis, a wide familiarity with relevant anthropological literature, and an expert knowledge of the materials of the arts, especially music . . . her analyses are singularly earnest and vigorous, and her conception of the problem is fresh and generously broad."
— Journal of Philosophy Vissza

Tartalom


CONTENTS
I. THE NEW KEY 3
Every epoch characterized by its questions — "generative ideas": their
rise and decline — examples from Greek philosophy — rise and exhaustion of Christian philosophy — rise and exhaustion of modern philosophy — philosophical interests stifled by technological — only mathematics remains both "abstract" and respectable — mathematics a science of symbols and meanings — sense-data and interpretation in science — data as symbols and laws as their meanings — power of symbols a new theme
— "dynamic" psychology — symbolic logic — extravagance of young "generative ideas" — limits of the "field" of an idea — promise of the "new key."
II. SYMBOLIC TRANSFORMATION 26
Influence of semantic problems on genetic psychology — presuppositions of genetic theory: identity of animal and human needs, and derivation of symbol-responses from sign-responses — the mind as a transmitter
— sources of error — error grows with complication — impractical effects of symbol-using — absurdity of a theory that reduces intelligence to folly — such theory contradicted by the persistence of impractical ritual
— by the seriousness of art — by the phenomenon of dream — inventory of human needs reconsidered — special functions presuppose special needs — need of symbolization — the human mind as a transformer — impractical behavior symbolistic — this view explains many anthropological puzzles — several uses of symbolism call for separate investigations.
III. THE LOGIC OF SIGNS AND SYMBOLS 53
Existing analyses of meaning-relation mainly acceptable — historical survey — "quality" of meaning elusive — meaning a function of terms — patterns as contexts — subject, symbol, and object — "meanings of 'meaning' " relative to choice of terms in a pattern — signs and symbols — wide scope of sign-relations — mistake — logical simplicity of signs — symbols and conceptions — names — as signs and as symbols — distinction illustrated by case of Helen Keller — signification, denotation, and connotation — relatedness of denotation and connotation — proper names excepted — symbols and discourse — literal meanings and propositions — syntactical structures — the "logical picture" as a symbol — progressive abstraction — conceptions and concepts — abstraction the basis of rationality — logical virtues of language — truth and falsity.
xviii
CONTENTS
IV. DISCURSIVE FORMS AND PRESENTATIONAL FORMS 79 "Logical projection" — discursive form a "projection" — Carnap's conclusion: syntax of language the limit of conceivability — non-literal symbolism "emotive" — Russell and Wittgenstein on metaphysics — philosophy a development of meanings — symbolic function wider than language — limitation to language leaves too much of mentality nonsensical — rationality begins with articulation — sense-experience an articulation — conceptual character of "things" — "Gestalt" the forerunner of symbolic uses — apprehension of non-discursive forms — such forms not "linguistic" even in a derived sense — logical characteristics of language — of presentational symbolisms — primitive understanding
— forms of feeling — progressive articulation of presentational forms — key to major developments of culture.
V. LANGUAGE 103
All men have completely articulate language — no beasts have any
language — animal communication — mutism of apes — lack of babbling-impulse in the young — enigma of linguistic origins — sometimes sought in "speech-instinct" — deaf children and "wild" children do not speak — problem rejected by philologists — Sapir's reason: it requires general theory of symbolism — its roots always sought in communication — should be sought in early symbol-functions — primitive symbolic behavior of apes — lack of "lalling-instinct" precludes speech — symbols and free forms — utilitarian view a mistake — Furness' ape — the Wild Boy of Aveyron — human "lalling" a transient instinct — conditions for learning language — Donovan's theory of origin — connotation probably before denotation — use — always propositional — Bühler and Wegener on development — emendation — generality through metaphor — Wegener on "faded metaphors" — evolution of conceptual thinking — universality of language explained.
VI. LIFE-SYMBOLS: THE ROOTS OF SACRAMENT . . 144 Sense-images and concepts — metaphorical uses — primitive abstraction
— fantasies — desire and dream — primitive imagination — confusion of symbol and meaning in dream — in savage thought — power of "sacra"
— intellectual excitement in contemplation — emotional expression and gesture — ritual — mimetic rites — mimicry in play — Dewey's theory rejected—ritual as assent to sacred concepts — magic not essentially practical — familiar acts acquire strictest forms — sacrament — derivation of divinities from "sacra" — animal forms — totemism — Jane Harrison on the making of gods.
VII. LIFE-SYMBOLS: THE ROOTS OF MYTH . . . .171 Ritual and myth have different origins — dream and story — primitive
story — characters and acts symbolical — growth of fairytale — fairytale
CONTENTS
xix
and myth — difference of functions — realistic elements in fairytale — generalization of forms — problem of "nature myths" — the "culture hero" — link between fairytale and myth — nature symbols in his story — evolution of a lunar deity — personification of moon is lunarization of Woman — mythical elaboration — influence of poetic formulation — the Kalevala as transitional form — epic phase the consummation of myth.
VIII. ON SIGNIFICANCE IN MUSIC 204
Art and artifact — "Significant Form" — meaning as central problem
of modern aesthetics — problem of artistic significance — psychoanalytic theory not helpful — form the source of artistic merit — music the best example — theories of music as pleasure — as emotional stimulus — as communication of feeling — fallacy of self-expression theory — music not symptom but symbol — its "significance" a logical problem of art — language of music — program music — language of feeling — logical structure of music and of feeling — analogy of language misleading — Huber on semantic elements in music — presentational symbol not translatable — Urban's theory of art rejected — difficulties of analysis — emotional attitudes of critics — autonomy defended — music as "algebra of feelings" — fallacies — music an unconsummated symbol — assignment of meanings a crutch to musical thinking — musical meanings real but "implicit" — form and content experienced as one.
IX. THE GENESIS OF ARTISTIC IMPORT 246
Origins of music not artistic — sources of folk music — genetic fallacy
— materials furnished by casual sounds — benefit of models in plastic arts — danger of models — confusion of standards — articulation the aim of art — artistic vision — late development of music — due to lack of models — rhythms and words its only guides — airs — emancipation from models — artistic import — Pater's dictum — no comparison of arts implied — content of various arts — unity sought in "aesthetic emotion" — nature of that emotion — not the content of art — artist and audience
— "artistic truth" as adequacy of symbol — distinguished from literal truth — artistic insight — standards of art not absolute — new forms not lucid — old forms become exhausted — literal interpretation and artistic vision — mysticism the limit of meaning.
X. THE FABRIC OF MEANING 266
Practical vision — appreciation of fact — propositional form of fact —
truth and falsity — interest in fact the destruction of myth — "discoveries" secondary — tendency toward realism develops with maturity — system-atization of facts an intellectual challenge — fact as standard of reality — history its typical expression — more factual than science — causation — and verification — combination of symbols and signs — power of realistic thought — change in man's world — nature-symbols outgrown — modern life — signs and symbols the warp and woof of thought — sign-functions
XX
CONTENTS
— symbol-functions — complexity of meanings — "charged" symbols — complexity of mental life — hardships of moral life — need of orientation
— lack of potent life-symbols — modern reality too new to furnish new "sacra" — freedom of action depends on fixed values — values depend on symbols — ritual acts — meaninglessness in modern life — reorientation a rational need — modern barbarism the effect of new emergent mythologies.

Susanne K. Langer

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