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Chapter 1 - Different Kinds of Willing in Schopenhauer
- Edited by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio
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- Schopenhauer's 'The World as Will and Representation'
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- 08 December 2022
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- 22 December 2022, pp 11-25
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Chris Janaway argues that Schopenhauer's theory of negation of the will is problematic: How can you will not to will?If will is the basis of all reality, who would remain to experience the satisfaction that negation of the will supposedly generates? Janaway argues that negation of the will is best thought of as negation specifically of the will to life, and that this is compatible with the existence of other kinds of willing. Will to life is egoistic willing; and the negation of this kind of willing is consistent with nonegoistic willing and, in particular, moral action. This more constrained interpretation of the doctrine of negation of the will not only makes more sense of the text when Schopenhauer distinguishes between self- and other-directed willing; it helps clarify Schopenhauer’s account of the relation between virtue and holiness. The morally righteous person has other-directed desires at least some of the time, but not necessarily all of the time, while the saint no longer has any self-directed desires at all. Finally, Janaway shows that this interpretation of negation of the will has the virtue of bringing Schopenhauer closer to the Buddhist models he cites in support of his theory.
Chapter 4 - Zarathustra’s Response to Schopenhauer
- Edited by Keith Ansell-Pearson, University of Warwick, Paul S. Loeb, University of Puget Sound, Washington
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- Nietzsche's ‘Thus Spoke Zarathustra'
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- 09 June 2022
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- 23 June 2022, pp 83-103
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The problem, according to Janaway, is that the unchangeable past appears to overwhelm the future in such a way that it is impossible for us to create anything new. This is the meaning of that key moment in TSZ where Zarathustra is devastated by the pessimistic teaching that all is empty, all is the same, all has been (ZII: “The Soothsayer”). If he cannot creatively transform the present-day human into his envisioned future superhuman, Zarathustra loses his reason for living. But then he awakens his dormant thought of eternal recurrence and realizes that he can in fact create the past from the perspective of the present moment. Given the thought of eternal recurrence, the past is no longer closed and hence the future remains open too.
Index
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 701-711
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Chapter 15 - On the Essential Imperfections of the Intellect
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 146-156
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The form of our self-consciousness is not space but only time: this is why our thinking does not, like our intuition, occur in three dimensions, but only in one, and thus in a line without breadth or depth. This gives rise to the greatest of the fundamental imperfections of our intellect. Namely, we can have cognition of things only successively and can be conscious only of one thing at a time, and in fact this one thing only under the condition that we forget everything else in the meantime, that is, have no consciousness of anything else, so that nothing else exists for us during this time. In this respect, our intellect can be compared to a telescope with a very narrow field of vision, because our consciousness is not lasting but transient. The intellect apprehends things only successively and must leave one thing behind in order to grasp another, retaining only ever fainter traces of what is left behind. The thought that engages me keenly now will necessarily have entirely slipped my mind in a little while: and if I get a good night's sleep in between, then I might never find it again unless I have some personal interest in it, i.e. it is connected to my will, which always carries the day.
This imperfection of the intellect is the basis for the rhapsodic and often fragmentary character of our train of thought, which I already mentioned at the end of the previous chapter, and gives rise to the inevitable scattering of our thoughts. Sometimes external sense impressions disturb and interrupt our thinking and keep forcing complete irrelevancies upon it, and sometimes one idea will bring in another through the ties of association and be displaced by it; and finally, sometimes the intellect itself will not be able to sustain one single idea for very long, but be rather like the eyes when, after staring for a long time at a single object, they no longer see it very clearly since the edges run together and become confused and everything finally becomes obscure – similarly, when constantly pondering a single topic for a long period of time, thinking gradually becomes confused and blunted and ends up completely stupefied.
Notes on Text and Translation
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp xxxvii-xliv
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Chapter 16 - On the Practical use of Reason and Stoicism
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 157-168
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In Chapter 7 I showed that, in the theoretical realm, starting from concepts leads to mediocre achievements, while superior achievements are drawn from intuition itself, as the well-spring of all cognition. But it is the other way around in the practical realm: here being determined by intuition is the way of animals, and this is unworthy of human beings whose actions are guided by concepts and who are thereby emancipated from the power of what lies before them in the intuitive present, the very present that has unconditional control over animals. A human being's actions can be called rational to the extent that he exercises this privilege, and it is only in this sense that we can we speak of practical reason, not in the Kantian sense, the untenability of which I discussed at length in the prize essay On the Basis of Morals.
However, it is not easy to be determined by concepts alone: the external world, as it lies before us with its intuitive reality, will intrude forcefully on even the strongest mind. But the human spirit shows its dignity and greatness precisely in vanquishing this impression, in negating its mocking illusion. So when someone's spirit is unmoved by the charms of pleasure and enjoyment, untouched by the threats and furies of enraged enemies, when his resolve is unshaken by the entreaties of misguided friends or the illusions surrounding him as a result of agreed-upon schemes, when his self-command is not shattered by the spite of fools and the masses so that he misjudges his own value – then he seems to stand under the influence of a spiritual world (it is the spiritual world of concepts) visible to himself alone, and that intuitive present that is open to everyone flees like a phantom before it. – On the other hand, what gives the external world and visible reality its great power over the mind is its proximity and immediacy. We can think of the needle of the compass that maintains its direction throughout the united effect of widely distributed natural forces across the entire earth, and yet can be disturbed and made to sway wildly by a tiny piece of iron that happens to come too close;
Chapter 45 - On the Affirmation of the Will to Life
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 583-587
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If the will to life presented itself merely as a drive for self-preservation, it would be only an affirmation of the individual appearance for the span of its natural duration. The worries and cares of such a life would not be great, and so existence would prove easy and cheerful. On the other hand, because the will wills life absolutely and for all time, it presents itself at the same time as the sex drive, which has an endless series of generations in view. This drive abolishes the carefree attitude, the cheerfulness and innocence that would accompany a merely individual existence by bringing disquiet and melancholy into consciousness, and misfortune, trouble and misery into the course of a life. – If however it is voluntarily repressed, as we see in rare exceptions, then this is the turninga of the will, which reverses itself. It then goes out in the individual, instead of going beyond him. But this can only take place through a painful violence that the individual inflicts on himself. But if it does happen, then the consciousness recoups that carefree cheerfulness of the merely individual existence and, indeed, is raised to a higher power. – On the other hand, when that most vehement of all drives and desires is satisfied, then a new being comes into existence, and thus a continuation of life with all its burdens, cares, needs and pains, admittedly in another individual – but, if the two who are distinct in appearance were distinct absolutely and in themselves, then where would eternal justice be? – Life presents itself as a task, a lesson to be worked out, and thus typically as a constant struggle against need. This is why everyone tries to get through it as well as he can: he gets through life like bonded labour to pay off a debt. But who has contracted this debt? – The one who begot him, in the enjoyment of sensuous pleasure. And so, for the pleasure of the one, the other must live, suffer, and die. We know and should recall in this context that space and time are the condition under which similar things are differentiated, a condition that I have in this sense termed the principle of individuation.
Second Half - The Doctrine of Abstract Representation, or Thinking
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 63-64
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Chapter 34 - On the Inner Essence of Art
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 423-427
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Not only philosophy but also the fine arts work at a fundamental level towards a solution to the problem of existence. In every mind that has ever devoted itself to the pure contemplation of the world there stirs a striving, however hidden and unconscious it may be, to grasp the true essence of things, of life, of existence. For this alone is of interest to the intellect as such, i.e. to the subject of cognition freed from the goals of the will and hence pure; in just the same way, the goals of the will are the only things of interest to the subject that cognizes as a mere individual. – This is why the result of every purely objective, and therefore every artistic grasp of things is one more expression of the essence of life and existence, one more answer to the question: ‘what is life?’ – Every true and successful work of art answers this question in its own way, with complete calm. But the arts speak only in the naïve and childish language of intuition, not in the abstract and serious language of reflection: their answer is therefore a fleeting image: not a lasting, universal cognition. And thus every artwork answers that question for intuition, every painting, every statue, every poem, every scene on stage: even music answers it; and in fact more profoundly than all the others since it expresses the innermost essence of life and existence in a language that is directly comprehensible even though it cannot be translated into the language of reason. All the other arts hold an intuitive image before the questioner and say: ‘look here, this is life!’ – Their answer, as correct as it might be, still only ever grants a temporary, not a total and final, satisfaction. Because they only ever offer a fragment, an example, instead of the rule, not the whole, which can only be given in the universality of the concept. To give a permanent and eternally satisfying answer to that question in the abstract, for the concept, and hence for reflection – this is the task of philosophy.
Chapter 47 - On Ethics
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 604-617
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Now there is a large gap in these supplements because I already dealt with morality in the narrower sense in the two prize essays published under the title The Two Fundamental Problems of Ethics, and, as I have already mentioned, I am assuming that the reader is familiar with these essays so as to avoid needless repetition. Thus what remains to be presented is simply a small epilogue of isolated remarks that could not be articulated in the earlier essays, where the principal theme of the contents was prescribed by the Academies; least of all was I able to include any remarks that would require any standpoint higher than the one shared by all, and so this is where I was forced to remain. Thus it will not surprise the reader to find these remarks in a very fragmentary arrangement. These in turn are continued in the eighth and ninth chapters of the Second Volume of the Parerga. –
That moral investigations are incomparably more important than physical ones, indeed than all others, follows from the fact they concern the thing in itself almost directly, that is, they concern the appearance in which, immediately touched by the light of cognition, the thing in itself reveals its essence as will. Physical truths on the other hand remain entirely within the purview of representation, i.e. of appearance, and show merely how the lowest appearances of the will present themselves in representation in a lawful manner. – Further, the results gathered from considering the world from the physical side will offer us no solace, however broadly and cheerfully such an investigation is pursued: solace comes from the moral side alone, since here the depths of our own inner being come into consideration.
My philosophy is however the only one that grants morality its full and complete rights: for a human being's deeds really only belong to and are attributable to him if his essence is his own will, which makes him, in the strictest sense, his own work. On the other hand, as soon as he has a different origin or is the work of a being other than himself, all of his guilt falls back onto this origin or author. Because ‘acting follows from being’.
Chapter 26 - On Teleology
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 341-356
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The total purposiveness of organic nature with respect to the continued existence of every being, along with its conformity to the inorganic, cannot be easily accommodated by a philosophical system that does not postulate a will at the foundation of the existence of every natural being, a will that therefore expresses its being and striving not in the first instance only in actions but also in the shape of the organism that appears. In the previous chapter I merely hinted at the account of this topic that grows out of our train of thought, having already demonstrated it in the passage of the First Volume cited below, and with particular clarity and thoroughness in the Will in Nature under the heading ‘Comparative Anatomy’. The following remarks will take up from that point.
The sense of wonder that threatens to overwhelm us when we consider the endless purposiveness of the structure of organic beings is due fundamentally to the natural but false presupposition that this agreement of the parts with each other, with the whole of the organism, and with its goals in the external world, as we apprehend and judge it by means of cognition, and thus along the path of representation, has also been produced in the same way; hence, that as it exists for the intellect, it was also brought about by an intellect. Of course, we can produce something that conforms to rule and law, such as is the case with any crystal for instance, only under the guidance of laws and rules, and likewise we can make something purposive only when guided by a concept of the purpose: but there is no justification for transferring this limitation of ours to nature, which is itself something prior to any intellect and whose workings, as was mentioned in the previous chapter, are utterly different in kind from our own. Nature produces things that look so purposive and so deliberate but does this without deliberation and without a concept of any purpose because it lacks any representation, which has a completely secondary origin. Let us begin by considering things that are merely regular but not yet purposive.
Supplements to the Second Book
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 199-200
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Ihr folget falscher Spur,
Denkt nicht, wir scherzen!
Ist nicht der Kern der Natur
Menschen im Herzen?
Goethe[This is no jest!
Your trail's wrong from the start,
Nature's own secret nest
Is in our own human heart
(Gott und Welt, ‘Ultimatum’)]
Chapter 4 - On Cognition a Priori
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 36-62
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From the fact that we ourselves provide and determine the laws governing relations in space without requiring any experience to do so, Plato concluded (Meno, p. 353 Bipont) that all learning is mere recollection; Kant on the other hand concluded that space is subjectively conditioned and merely a form of the cognitive faculty. How far Kant towers above Plato in this respect!
Cogito, ergo sum is an analytic judgment: Parmenides even considered it an identical judgment: ‘because thinking and being are the same’ – Clement of Alexandria, Stromata VI, 2, § 23. But as an identical judgment, or even a merely analytic one,11 it can not contain any special wisdom; nor can it do so if, even more fundamentally, we want to derive it as a conclusion from themajor premise ‘thatwhich is not has no predicates’. But in fact Descartes wanted to use this judgment to express the great truth that immediate certainty can be attributed only to self-consciousness, which is to say, to the subjective; and that certainty about what is objective, which is to say everything else, is only indirect and must be mediated by what is subjective; and thus the objective must be regarded as problematic because it comes to us second hand. The value of his famous claim is based on this. In the spirit of the Kantian philosophy, we could propose its opposite as: cogito, ergo est – i.e. just as I think of things in certain relations (mathematical ones), they must always turn out in exactly that way in every possible experience, – this was an important, profound, and mature aperçu that appeared in the guise of the problem of the possibility of synthetic judgments a priori and truly prepared the way for profound discovery. This problem is the slogan of Kant's philosophy, just as the former claim is the slogan of Descartes’, and shows ‘from which to which’.
Very appropriately, Kant places his investigations into time and space ahead of all others, because these questions confront the speculative mind above all others:What is time?What is this being that consists of pure motion without anything that moves? – And what is space? – this omnipresent nothing from which no thing can escape without ceasing to be something?
Chapter 7 - On the Relation of Intuitive to Abstract Cognition
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 77-97
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Now since, as we have shown, concepts borrow their content from intuitive cognition, and the entire edifice of our world of thought therefore rests on the world of intuitions; we must accordingly be able to trace each concept, even if there are intermediary stages, back to the intuitions from which either it is itself immediately derived, or from which the concepts whose abstraction it is have been derived: i.e. we must be able to verify it with intuitions that act as examples in relation to the abstractions. These intuitions therefore provide the real content of all our thinking, and wherever they are lacking we do not have concepts but instead only words in our head. In this respect, our intellect is like a bank of issue which, when solvent, must have enough money ready in the registers to be able to redeem on demand all the notes that have been issued: intuitions are the ready cash, concepts are the receipts. – In this sense, intuitions could quite fittingly be called primary representations, and concepts by contrast secondary representations: not quite so aptly, the scholastics, at the insistence of Aristotle (Metaphysics VI, 11; XI, 1), called real things primary substances and concepts secondary substances. – Books communicate only secondary representations. Mere concepts of a thing, in the absence of intuition, give a merely general acquaintance with it. We get a completely thorough understanding of things and their relations only to the extent that we are able to picture them entirely in clear intuitions, without the help of words. To explain words using words, to compare concepts to other concepts, which is what most philosophizing consists of, is basically a game of back-and-forth across the conceptual spheres, in order to see which ones go into the others and which ones do not. At best this lets you draw some conclusions, but conclusions do not give completely new cognition, they only show us everything that is already present and what aspects of it might be applied in any given case. Intuiting, on the other hand, letting the things themselves speak to us, grasping new relations between them and then putting or recording all this into concepts so as to possess it more securely: this provides new cognitions.
Chapter 20 - Objectivation of the Will in the Animal Organism
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 258-281
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By objectivation I mean self-presentation in the real world of bodies. In addition, as I have shown in detail in the First Book and its supplements, this is itself thoroughly conditioned by the cognitive subject, which is to say the intellect, and is thus absolutely unthinkable outside its cognition: for it is in the first instance only intuitive representation and, as such, a phenomenon of the brain. After it has been eliminated, what remains is the thing in itself. The fact that this is the will is the theme of the Second Book, where it is first established in the human and animal organism.
Cognition of the external world can also be referred to as consciousness of other things, in contrast to self-consciousness. After having found within selfconsciousness that the will is the true object ormaterial of self-consciousness, we will now, with the same intention, take into account consciousness of other things and hence objective cognition. My present thesis then is this: what in self-consciousness, and thus subjectively, is the intellect, is presented in consciousness of other things, and thus objectively, as the brain: and what in selfconsciousness, and thus subjectively, is the will, is presented in consciousness of other things, and thus objectively, as the entire organism.
I now add the following supplements and clarifications to the proofs of this claim as presented both in our Second Book as well as in the first two chapters of the essay On Will in Nature.
Most of what is needed to establish the first part of this thesis was presented in the previous chapter, since the necessity of sleep, alterations due to age, and the distinctions between anatomical formations all prove that the intellect, being secondary in nature, is completely dependent on a single organ, the brain, whose function it is, just as grasping is the function of the hand; and that the intellect is therefore physical like digestion, not metaphysical like the will. Just as good digestion requires a strong and healthy stomach, and athletic prowess requires strong and muscular arms, extraordinary intelligence requires an unusually developed, supremely well-constructed brain that is marked by a fine texture and animated by an energetic pulse.
On the Fourth Book
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 477-477
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Supplements to the Third Book
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 377-378
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Et is similis spectatori est, quod ab omni separatus spectaculum videt. Oupnek’hat, vol. 1, p. 304
[And he is like a spectator because he views the drama while separated from everything else. (Based on Maitrī-Upanishad, 2, 7. On Oupnek’hat see p. 474, n. a)
Chapter 22 - Objective View of the Intellect
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 285-304
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There are two fundamentally different ways of investigating the intellect, based on two different standpoints; but however opposed this difference makes them, they must nonetheless be brought into agreement. – The one is the subjective view which, starting from the inside and taking consciousness as given, shows us the mechanism through which the world presents itself in consciousness, and how it constructs itself in consciousness from materials provided by the senses and the understanding. Locke must be regarded as the originator of this mode of investigation: Kant perfected it to an incomparable extent, and our First Book, together with its supplements, is also dedicated to this view.
The opposite way of investigating the intellect is the objective way, which starts from the outside and does not take one's own consciousness for its object but instead takes the beings that are given in outer experience and that are conscious of themselves and the world; it examines the relationship their intellect has to their other qualities, what makes their intellect possible, what makes it necessary, and what it does for them. The standpoint of this type of investigation is empirical: it takes the world and the animal beings present in it as simply given, since it proceeds from these. It is therefore primarily zoological, anatomical, physiological, and only becomes philosophical in connection with the first type of investigation and the higher standpoint this has achieved. We are indebted to (mostly French) zootomists and physiologists for the only groundwork provided so far for this investigation. Cabanis in particular should be cited in this regard, since his superb work, The Relations of the Physical to the Moral was a pioneering text in establishing the physiological perspective. The famous Bichat was working at the same time, although his subject was much broader. Even Gall deserves to be mentioned here, even though his principal goal went astray. Ignorance and prejudice have levelled the charge of materialism against this mode of investigation, because, in sticking purely to experience, it does not recognize the immaterial substance, the soul.
Chapter 35 - On the Aesthetics of Architecture
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 428-435
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In conformity with the derivation we gave in the text of the purely aesthetic aspects of architecture from the lowest levels of the objectivation of the will or of nature, whose Ideas it wants to make more clearly intuitive, the single and constant theme of architecture, is supports and loads, and its fundamental principle is that there should be no load without sufficient support, and no support without a proportionate load, and thus the relation between the two must be precisely the appropriate one. The theme is put into operation most purely in columns and entablature: and thus the arrangement of columns has become the thorough-bass, as it were, of the whole of architecture. In columns and entablature, supports and loads are completely separate; so that the effect they have on each other and their relation to each other becomes obvious. Any simple wall will already make use of supports and loads, only here the two are still blended together: everything is both support and load, and hence there is not an aesthetic effect. This only appears when they are separated, and is proportional to the degree of separation. There are many intermediary stages between a row of columns and a plain wall. Even when the wall of a house is broken simply by windows and doors, one can at least try to present this separation through flat, protruding pilasters (antes) with capitals instead of moulding, even painting the capitals on if need be: this will indicate, in at least some way, the entablature and arrangement of pillars. Actual pillars, as well as consoles and supports of different sorts give an even greater reality to the pure separation of support and load to which architecture aspires. In this respect, the vaulted ceiling with pillars stands next to the column with entablature, but as a distinctive construction in its own right that does not merely imitate this latter. The aesthetic effect of the vaulted ceiling does not of course come close to that of the column and entablature, because in the former case the support and load are not purely separated but rather merge together.
Chapter 24 - On Matter
- Arthur Schopenhauer
- Edited and translated by Judith Norman, Trinity University, Texas, Alistair Welchman, University of Texas, San Antonio, Christopher Janaway, University of Southampton
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- Schopenhauer: <I>The World as Will and Representation</I>
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- 30 June 2022
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- 09 May 2018, pp 317-330
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Summary
We already mentioned matter in the fourth chapter of the supplements to the First Book, while examining that aspect of our cognition of which we are a priori conscious. But there we could only examine it from a one-sided perspective, because we were focusing solely on its relation to the forms of the intellect and not to the thing in itself, and so we investigated it only from the subjective side, i.e. to the extent that it is our representation, and not from the objective side, i.e. according to what it might be in itself. In the first regard, our conclusion was that it is efficacy in general, apprehended objectively but without more precise determination; this is why it occupies the place of causality in the table given there of our a priori cognition. For the material is activity (actuality) in general and apart from the specific mode of its action. So matter, merely as such, is not an object of intuition but only of thought, and therefore a genuine abstraction: in intuition on the other hand it occurs only in connection with form and quality, as a body, i.e. as a fully determinate mode of acting. Only by abstracting from these more precise determinations can we think of matter as such, i.e. divorced from form and quality: consequently we think of matter as acting as such and in general, which is to say, efficacy in the abstract. Any more precisely determined action we apprehend as the accident of matter: but it is only in this way that matter becomes intuitive, i.e. presents itself as a body and object of experience. On the other hand, as I have shown in the critique of Kantian philosophy, pure matter, which is the only constituent of the actual and legitimate content of the concept of substance, is causality itself, conceived objectively and therefore spatially and thus as filling space. Accordingly, the whole essence of matter consists in acting: only by acting does it fill space and persist in time: it is nothing but causality through and through. Thus where there is action, there is matter, and the material is activity in general.