I find fascinating the way in which Kant seeks a resolution to the traditional opposition of subjective and objective experience (previously separated by rational and empirical philosophies), within the human consciousness itself. His acceptance of the limits of human cognitive powers, and of the role of subjective experience in stimulating a continuing creative interplay between mind and 'reality', take him beyond the Enlightenment belief that reality can be conceptualised. His thinking in many ways approaches much more contemporary philosophical realms of 'lived' life and relational indeterminacy.
![]() |
| R. Bolinger: Kant in the style of Picasso |
For Kant consciousness of nature is
shaped by the way in which we attempt to articulate and order it within our
cognitive limitations, even though human understanding does not allow nature to
be completely conceptualised (‘Independent
natural beauty reveals to us a technic of nature that allows us to present
nature as a system in terms of laws whose principle we do not find anywhere in
our understanding’ (CJ 246)). Within an aesthetic response to nature that
acknowledges the limits of cognition there is an intuition of the
‘supersensible’. Kant describes a process whereby, ‘we cannot cognise, but can only think nature as an exhibition of [the
supersensible]. But it is this idea that is aroused in us when, as we judge an
object aesthetically, this judging strains the imagination to its limit…because
it is based on a feeling that the mind has a vocation that wholly transcends
the domain of nature (namely moral feeling’ and it is with regard to this
feeling that we judge the presentation of the object subjectively purposive’
(CJ 268).
It is this aesthetic response to
nature that forms the premise for Kant’s reflections on art. While he
associates art (unlike nature) with intention, ‘a determinate intention to produce something’ (CJ 307), he elevates
art that (like nature) appears uncontrived: ‘even though the purposiveness in a product of fine art is
intentional, it must still not seem intentional; i.e., fine art must have the
look of nature even though we are conscious of it as art
(CJ 307).
For Kant the highest form of art is the product of 'genius',
which he defines as 'originality', 'the very opposite of a spirit of
imitation' (CJ 308), or as 'the innate mental disposition (ingenium)
through which nature gives the rule to art' (CJ 307). ‘Good’ art,
therefore, is art that evokes a multi-faceted aesthetic response similar to
that experienced in nature.
Kant's reflections on the limits of cognition
and language, the emphasis on lived experience, the question of mimesis in
representation, and that elusive 'of-itself' quality that gives both nature art
their potency, prefigure more contemporary philosophical thought. Heidegger’s
‘Dasein’ occupies the same space in which mind interacts with lived experience.
His circular thesis that it is art that is the originator of both art and
artist - that the origin of art concerns the nature of art – appears to
progress Kant’s idea of ‘purposiveness’. Heidegger's familiar articulation
that,' The nature of art, on which both the art work and the artist depend,
is the setting-itself-into-work of truth' (OWP 70), occupies itself, just
as Kant does, with that aspect of the aesthetic that exceeds or transcends
conceptualisation.
In relation to a personal creative
practice that is about human engagement and relationship with a non-human
world, Kant forms an important philosophical starting point. For Kant nature is
the well-spring of creativity, moral and spiritual awareness, a world of which
humans are inextricably a part, but from which our conscious self is felt to
separate us. In today's increasingly virtual world this separation is as much
physical as conceptual. In this world, as in Kant’s, is the aesthetic sense, the
intuition or ‘genius’ though which 'nature gives the rule to art', that creates
the possibility of reconnection.
Illustration
Kant in the style of Picasso, by Renee Bolinger [online] Available from:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/04/renee-bolinger_n_3865653.html
[16 Sept 2016]
Sources
Heidegger, M. (1971) ‘The
Origin of the Work of Art’ Poetry, Language, Thought. Translated
from German by Albert Hofstadter, New York: Harper and Row [online] Available
from: http://ssbothwell.com/documents/ebooksclub.org__Poetry__Language__Thought__Perennial_Classics_.pdf
Kant, I. (1790), The Critique of
Judgment. Translated from German by W.S.Pluhar, Indianapolis: Hackett
Publishing Company 1987 [online] Available from: https://monoskop.org/images/7/77/Kant_Immanuel_Critique_of_Judgment_1987.pdf
[16 Sept 2016]
Cazeaux, C. (ed.) (2000) The
Continental Aesthetics Reader. Oxford and New York: Routledge.
Rohlf, Michael, "Immanuel
Kant", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2016
Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.) [online]. Available from
<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2016/entries/kant/> [16 Sept 2016]

No comments:
Post a Comment