10 hours ago
(This post was last modified: 9 hours ago by Magical Realist.)
What does it mean to say that such and such is represented by an image or object? That a totally unique and perceived thing can be allowed to stand in for another thing or state as if it were present? For example I see your face. I almost unconsciously compute at lightning speed the geometrical configuration of your facial details--the eye brows and mouth mainly--as representing a certain subjective mood or emotion inside you. This is something we have learned from years of experience with watching faces and seeing them as expressing certain invisible subjective states to us. We can say that these facial expressions "represent" those states. That they stand in for the actual presence of those states in our own consciousness.
Or we hear someone utter something. The words and how they are spoken immediately represent to us some state that is not itself experienced but only imagined. Representation then seems to pivot on this capacity for things or actions or events to "RE-present" in the sense of presenting something only thru the being of something else. That something else can only represent to the extent that conceals it's own being. The facial expressions and the uttered words are not experienced "in themselves" as present. They are the media thru which something else is made present. Ironically what represents only does so by seeming not to be present and instead immediately referring to something else. The image or thing NOT experienced as a thing in itself but more like an icon or link that immediately takes us somewhere else. Thoughts?
Or we hear someone utter something. The words and how they are spoken immediately represent to us some state that is not itself experienced but only imagined. Representation then seems to pivot on this capacity for things or actions or events to "RE-present" in the sense of presenting something only thru the being of something else. That something else can only represent to the extent that conceals it's own being. The facial expressions and the uttered words are not experienced "in themselves" as present. They are the media thru which something else is made present. Ironically what represents only does so by seeming not to be present and instead immediately referring to something else. The image or thing NOT experienced as a thing in itself but more like an icon or link that immediately takes us somewhere else. Thoughts?
