Nothingness and The Work of Art - A Comparative
Nothingness and The Work of Art - A Comparative
Nothingness and The Work of Art - A Comparative
244 Philosophy East & West Volume 58, Number 2 April 2008 244–266
> 2008 by University of Hawai‘i Press
amounts to that conveyed by the Latin word veritas, but implies the immediacy of
perceived phenomena. As such, it is tinted with an emphasis on the overcoming of
two major Western philosophical disciplines, namely aesthetics and metaphysics. In
the following paragraphs I will show how both of these instances imply a separation
between humanity and the world that is incompatible with Heidegger’s concept of
truth as the immediate presence of being.
The very concept of aesthetics emphasizes the senses as a mediating element
between the human being and the world. As the realm of aesthesis, the aesthetic pre-
supposes a fissure in the heart of being that in order be surpassed must be bridged by
a third, sensory element. Sensation becomes, then, that which, although initially in-
tended as the common ground between subject and object, confirms the existence
of their dualism in the first place.
The dissatisfaction with the concept of aesthetics, it must be noted, has a fairly
long history in Western philosophy. Right at the beginning of his Lectures on
Aesthetics (1831), Hegel writes: ‘‘the word aesthetics, taken literally, is not wholly
satisfactory, since ‘aesthetics’ means, more precisely, the science of sensation, of
feeling.’’ 1 While Hegel accepts to use the term only tentatively, Heidegger proceeds
to a critical/etymological analysis of it in his series of lectures published under the
title Nietzsche (1961). Heidegger’s dissatisfaction with the concept, however, goes
beyond that of Hegel’s. While Hegel is primarily concerned with taking the notion
of art beyond its mere relation with beauty and proceeds to emphasize its implica-
tions in human history as a whole, Heidegger departs from a deep-rooted distrust of
the senses as a means of apprehending reality and providing reliable access to truth.2
The separation implicit in the sensory implications of the traditional concept of
aesthetics remits us to another element that perpetrates an equally dualistic concep-
tion of the world. Metaphysics appears now as the second factor that instates a fis-
sure in being through its claim of the existence of a realm located beyond being, a
realm to which truth pertains in a way that makes impossible its disclosure in and as
being. Here we should be attentive to how both aesthetics and metaphysics pertain
to the dominion of Cartesian dualism. The Cartesian cogito instates the separation of
both subject and object, which separation is allegedly to be bridged by the sensory
as well as the material world and a metaphysical realm, which can be bridged only
by a re-ligare. The main point here is that the cogito must itself be understood as a
metaphysical entity separated from the world.
At any rate, we should notice that the shunning of the senses as a reliable means
of access to truth precedes the reflections of Heidegger in the development of exis-
tentialist thought. I am thinking here of Kierkegaard, and how his description of the
individual development toward authenticity downplays the aesthetic as an inferior
stage in that pursuit. Although Kierkegaard’s circumscribing of the aesthetic mode
of life as inferior to the ethical and the religious carries no direct reference to art, if
we follow his considerations and place the aesthetic in a sphere where authenticity
and truth are inaccessible, we will conclude that art is capable of providing access to
truth only when pertaining to a realm that is beyond that of the aesthetic. Beyond
such a realm, however, art will not exist for its own sake, and dealings with it will
To ‘‘listen abstractly’’ means to deny the communion and identity with the world that
exists at a non-mediated level. Sensations, then, are perceived as incapable of pro-
viding direct access to reality: only through a communion with being will its truth be
disclosed. If we look closely at Heidegger’s denial of sensation as a feasible entrance
door to truth, we will then be able to perceive that what underlies his attitude is the
attempt to overcome metaphysics.
Following our argument that art can be endowed with function only when per-
taining to a realm that is beyond the aesthetic, we must now recur to the history of
art to be reminded of how the process of aestheticization that took place during the
second half of the nineteenth century was conducted precisely as an effort to under-
mine art’s function. The emphasis on the purely aesthetic nature of a work of art rep-
resented a singular development where Modernity’s de-sacralization of the world, its
highlighting of the individual, and its obsession with the positive sciences and tech-
nology was reflected in art’s loss of a purpose outside itself in a paradoxical way. At
the same time that the work was disendowed with a specific role within human ex-
istence, be it ethical or religious, through a severe process of reification it came to
concentrate within its physical boundaries something akin to a metaphysical realm.
The work of art became a world in itself separated from human reality; as such it
came to incorporate metaphysics and its inherent fissure between the individual
and the world.
To re-endow art with a particular function and thus overcome its metaphysical
character was the task to which Heidegger set himself. In order to instate a role dis-
tinct from the one in which art points toward a realm separate from human life, Hei-
degger inverted art’s position within the framework of human history: art’s function
is no longer one of end, it is now one of origin. As art will no longer lead the human
being either to an absolute realm outside life or to a reified one inside an object,
something akin to an ethical role is in fact recovered: the great work of art, so con-
tends Heidegger, is the one that changes your life. So art now becomes capable of
bringing humanity into an authentic relation with its existence on earth, and in so
doing it becomes also the foundation of each possible world: art is hence understood
as a turning point, the origin of a new development in the life of an individual or a
group.
In his bestowal of a foundational function upon the work of art Heidegger is
clearly repeating on a grand scale the Husserlian cry for essences. As Husserl called
for a return to a pre-mathematized world free from the bias of the positive sciences,
Truth is that which has unified our experiential facts, and objective truth is the system of
representations that is most effective and most integrating. To know the truth or to accord
with it is to unify our experience; it is to proceed from a lesser to a greater unity. If we
regard our authentic self as being this unifying activity, then to know the truth is to accord
with this greater self, to actualize it.49
Our contention, again and one last time, is that the unity referred to by Nishida
has to be understood as the product of being’s search for stability and self-identity in
a realm that undermines its state of contingency and irrationality. Such state, in its
turn, must be perceived as the one expressed by the concept of mujō, a notion that
asserts impermanence as the ultimate reality of being. The unity achieved in truth,
then, will only be tentative, or at most fragile and abstract. It will ultimately be illu-
sory, for outside any momentary state of identity, being will continue to exist in its
state of mujō. Nevertheless, this kind of illusion appears as the only solace that hu-
manity, that fringe of being that glimpses its own contradiction, is left with.
Our inquiry has reached the point where we can consider the necessity and pos-
sibility of further developments. We have understood that the limitations of existen-
tial phenomenology in overcoming metaphysics are rooted in its failure to take the
concept of nothingness to its ultimate consequences. We have also recurred to phe-
nomenological ontology to propose its development toward an inquiry into Being
that functions in tandem with a theory of art where the work of art is defined as a
nonbeing beyond language. Existential phenomenology then, becomes the basis of
a description of the communion of a total happening of truth understood as the
merging of consciousness with itself within the horizon of the totality of being’s
self-denial as the ultimate truth of human life. Here we give phenomenology the
task of describing the particular instances of the realization of the ontological func-
tion of art, that is, of its promotion of the union of total being as undifferentiated from
nonbeing.
Notes