1. Essences exist.
Essences exist, but they are not eternal and unchanging. The surprising claim made here is that
essences change historically. Since they
change they seem very much unlike Plato’s Forms, and yet, like the Forms, they
are the realities revealed in the deep thinking associated with the “what is
X?” question.
Essences are the main objects of philosophical
understanding. They are also accessed
through mythical and artistic investigation.
They seem to be eternal and unchanging because they are as if eternal and unchanging. They are emergent historically and
ontologically from, and upon, the natural world. They are often emergent upon non-natural
created worlds as well. Those
non-natural worlds are themselves emergent upon the natural world. Essences, as I will argue, are not concepts, natural kinds, types,
Forms or Universals. But they are what
Plato was trying to get at when he described Forms (but failed because he
turned them into gods). They are
immanent, not transcendent.
Throughout my discussion of essences my paradigm will be the
essence of art. The phrase "the
essence of art" (as also the phrase "the essence of religion"
and other such phrases) refers to something that can be described, albeit in
different ways, and with different effects.
It refers to something that cannot be described literally. Nor can it be defined in terms of necessary
and sufficient conditions, although such definitions are often useful as a way
of articulating an understanding of that essence. It does refer to something that can be
described by way of certain seemingly
necessary and sufficient conditions, and by certain metaphors and myths.
Essences themselves are metaphor-like. They are tensional, interactional, and
capable of multiple interpretation in much the way metaphors are. Just as there is a dimension of nature that
corresponds to literally true statements there is an aspect of reality that
corresponds to true metaphors. Good and
powerful definitions of essences are true metaphors.
The metaphoric-like nature of essences points to the idea
that reality in its most significant aspect is a function of a dialectic of the
fictional and the nonfictional, the unreal and the real, the unconcealed and
the concealed.
2. Deep.
Essences are the objects of investigations that are
deep. Deep investigations are
inexhaustible and comprehensive. They go
beneath mere surface appearance, and they are critical of accepted
foundations. They originate new
fictional worlds, which are also, and at the same time, ways the world is.
Deep investigations take into account the entire range of
human experience: not just the cognitive
dimension, but also the sensuous, the emotional, and the imaginative. Deep
investigation, then, is phenomenologically deep.
3. "Essence."
The word "essence" here, does not refer to natural
phenomena, as in the essence of water.
The search for essences, as understood here, is a search for something
that exists within the lived worlds of conscious and reflective beings. Such entities could not exist without
us.
Water may have an "essence" under a completely
different sense of that term than that used here. Its essence would simply be a matter of what
science is trying to define when it defines water. One cannot model an essentialist
investigation of human things, such as art and religion, on an essentialist
investigation of purely physical things.
This is so, first, because human things are generally organic wholes, or
participate in organic wholes, and second because human things are always
constituted, in part, by consciousness.
4. Culturally Emergent.
Essences are culturally emergent entities, and thus are like
such other culturally emergent entities as minds, institutions, concepts,
meanings, persons, and cultures themselves.
Essences are also biologically emergent through evolution. Cultural emergence is emergent upon
biological emergence. Art, for example,
may have been biologically emergent in our species 100,000 years ago. The essence of art continues to emerge, but
now it is culturally emergent. The
cultural emergence of art is on top of its biological emergence.
Essences emerge, and continue to emerge: they emerge both ontologically and
historically. They emerge upon a
substratum which itself is emergent in many ways. For example, the essence of art is emergent
in part on artists and their activities, and these, in turn, are culturally emergent.
Essences are emergent upon, and therefore are aspects of, organic wholes. Moreover the parts of organic wholes upon
which essences are emergent also have aspects that are emergent upon the whole,
and therefore upon the whole's emergent essence. Emergence is therefore interactional. Even the material world-as-experienced is
emergent in this way. For example, the
experienced properties of a patch of paint pigment on a painting are emergent
upon the contextual situation of the pigment within a larger whole (the
painting) and upon the context of that painting within even larger wholes (e.g.
the life of the artist, the historical movement, etc.). Pigment also has emergent properties with
respect to the history of its use and associations.
5. Range of Essences.
We can speak of the essence of a person, an institution, a
painting, or a concept, although the main concern of philosophers is over
essences of things referred to by abstract general terms, such as
"art" and "man."
When does a word refer to an essence?
When it refers to a culturally contested concept, that is, a concept the
nature of which we argue over. In other
words, a word refers to an essence we argue over its definition, and this
argument expresses differing overall world-views.
This is one place where essences depart from what Plato
called Forms. Plato considered largeness
itself to be a Form. Insofar as there is
no culturally important debate over the nature of largeness, Largeness is not
an essence in my sense of the word.
However, if there were to be a debate over largeness, as there is over
life or art, then it would be an essence.
6. Instantiation Upon Particulars.
Although culturally emergent entities can have physical
properties, they are unlike physical objects in that they instantiate, and are
embodied in, other particulars. For
example, a work of art instantiates the essence of art and is embodied in a
physical object. The cultural world is
emergent upon the natural world. An
emergent entity is one that is embodied in
that upon which it is emergent. Thus, the cultural world is also embodied in
the natural world.
Particulars become essences when they exemplify that
essence. This is perhaps a shocking
claim. We tend to think of particulars
as radically different from essences.
But when a particular fully exemplifies beauty, for example, in the
sense that it is a living exemplar, then it is the essence of beauty actualized
and expressed.
7. Metaphysical Emergence.
Essences arise from metaphysical emergence. This is an extension of cultural
emergence. Just as works of art are
emergent upon persons, communities, and their interactions, so too essences are
emergent upon all of these at a higher level.
The essence of art, for example, is emergent upon persons, works of art,
communities, and the art-relevant interactions between these as they relate to
definitional debates.
Metaphysical emergence is not to be confused with
metaphysical transcendence, the concept of which it replaces. The idea of metaphysical emergence is that
entities previously thought to be metaphysically transcendent are actually
immanent within the world of experience.
However they are still ontologically distinct from those things upon
which they are emergent.
The idea of foundationalism is here reversed. The metaphysical does not form the foundation
of the structured edifice of knowledge or of being. Rather it is the crown of various events of
emergence. However, since metaphysical
entities (essences) are organically related to the entities upon which they are
emergent, they can also be seen as "within" these too. The
cultural world is itself made up of emergent entities directly, and upon the
natural world indirectly. However, there
is no one-to-one emergence on physical objects.
For example, a sculpture is not one-to-one emergent upon a
sculpture-shaped physical object.
Artworks are emergent upon, and embodied in, the materials of the art
object and their relations to artists and public, all of which are culturally
emergent entities.
8.
Essences,
Concepts and Forms
As I said earlier, essences are neither concepts nor
Forms. But it is helpful to understand
them as in some respects very like each.
For example, philosophers often see themselves as analyzing
concepts. But on one common
interpretation of concepts this would mean that they are analyzing something in
their minds, or at least something shared by many minds in a culture. This is not what analyzing concepts really
is since if it were it would be the same kind of work that lexicographers do. Or maybe it would be that plus what
psychoanalysts do. But if you have an
analysis of the essence of art, for example, you analyze art itself. At the same time, in analyzing art itself you
are analyzing some phenomena arranged and shaped under the word “art” and this
is very much like what we mean by analyzing the concept of art. This is why such analysis is inevitably
historically situated. To analysis the
essence of art is to participate in the ongoing dialectic of that essence. To create art seriously is also to do that.
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