The Image, Special issue of Critical Horizons : A Journal of Philosophy and Social Theory, Dec 9, 2013
The concept of 'the image' can be given historical, conceptual, aesthetic and moral specification... more The concept of 'the image' can be given historical, conceptual, aesthetic and moral specifications. This essay sets out some of the scholarly issues in the dense semantic field of 'the image'. In particular, the essay considers how the meaning of the image is often determined in relation to the opposition between sensible form and intelligible idea. Specific attention is given to Kantian aesthetics, which inaugurates a specific way of understanding the sensible form as a mode of processing moral ideas.
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The paper consists in a brief examination of the three issues I take to be
pertinent to the question of the coherence of a political reference in the
sublime. First I will examine the Kantian doctrine of the schema and the
place allotted to it by the image; second I will discuss the sense in which a
schema or image can be understood as political; and finally, I will offer a
brief discussion of the Kantian sublime to ask in what sense it carries a
correction to the 'schematisation' of the political.
anthropology as the ideal coping strategy, which rests in turn on the thesis of the instinct deficiency of the human species. Some of the features of species life, such as its sophisticated use of symbolic forms, come to be seen as necessary parts of this general coping strategy, rather than a merely expressive outlet, incidental to the ultimate goal of life preservation. The paper analyses the arguments used in support of the thesis of instinct deficiency in Hans Blumenberg and considers their implications for the status of symbolic expression in species life. It contrasts
the approach this thesis involves with one that proceeds by presenting and arguing from biological evolutionary evidence. The contrast is used to examine
the questions: in what sense instinct deficiency is specifically anthropological, and in what precise sense philosophical anthropology is ‘philosophical’.
This paper argues for the general analytical value of the term outside of these influential, regional definitions. It defends the thesis that the image is a tool for the communication of meaning. Through an analysis of the treatment of ‘form’ in works from the German tradition of philosophical anthropology (Jonas and Blumenberg), it is argued that the category of the image presupposes a subject who is engaged by it. In their experience of images human beings step outside their ordinary experience and even rework that experience in reference to categories that must be understood as artificial. In this regard, the meaning communicated in an image provides sensible intuition for ideas that would not otherwise have existential resonance, such as the idea of post-mortem life. In its heightened mode of communication, the image relays artificial contexts of meaning that provide human beings with enhanced frameworks for action.