Cloaked in the Light: Language, Consciousness, and the Problem of Description

Article

Cloaked in the Light: Language, Consciousness, and the Problem of Description

Published in: Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology
Volume 9 , issue 2 , 2009 , pages: 1–11
DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2009.11433993

Abstract

This paper deals with the implications of the limitations of language for phenomenological description. For corroboration, it relies on a section in Nietzsche’s The Gay Science in which he gives his most prolonged explanation of what he calls “the essence” of his understanding of “phenomenalism and perspectivism” (Nietzsche, 1882/1974, p. 299). The author contends that Nietzsche saw better into this problem than any other major theorist before or since, and that his understanding goes to the heart of things phenomenological. In support of this claim, examples are offered from two philosophers the author regards as most representative of phenomenology, Merleau-Ponty and Heidegger, of what seems to be evidence that neither saw into the problem as well as Nietzsche – Merleau-Ponty, in fact, seeming to have missed it almost altogether, and Heidegger seeing in it a spectre he was anxious to put to rest!

Get new issue alerts for Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology